So said Mick Maslen, Yorkshire artist and teacher. And perhaps none is more energetic than the Leading Line: the one that draws you insistently into an image to discover what lies at the other end. And which may leave you wondering, because you often never reach it.
My header image is from Cádiz, and is a bit of a text book classic. Pavement, road, seawall, cars, kerb-side buildings – even to a lesser extent the wispy clouds- all lead you on and drop you outside the city’s cathedral.
In other examples, it’s the journey along the lines, rather than the destination that commands our notice. Here’s one from Chalons-en-Champagne: the wall paintings rather than the chap at the end, are the story. Just as the couple in the underpass in Premià de Mar attract less attention than the graffiti they’ve just walked past.


Other leading lines have no destination that we can see. The Chirk Aqueduct, with viaduct behind is going somewhere. We just don’t know where. The same with the Rolling English Road in the Yorkshire Dales, and the track in another part of the Dales whose path has been enveloped by fog.



Just one more image today. The astonishing Millau Viaduct in France, some two and a half km. long, sweeps majestically about 35 metres above the River Tarn and the landscape and communities beneath- sometimes (and oh how I’d love to see it then!) even above the clouds.

For Leanne’s Monochrome Madness and her guest host this week Sarah, who writes Travel with Me.
Your last two images are nicely contrasted. I rarely visit France but I’d love to see the Millau Viaduct. Magnificent piece of engineering!
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It’s a fabulous holiday destination in its own right. There was a (Channel 5?) TV programme about its construction some years ago, which made for fascinating viewing. I wonder if it’s still available?
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Thank you – I’ll see if I can track it down.
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I immediately thought of that programme when I saw your photo! Such a fascinating programme, and I am envious you have actually seen the bridge
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Good to have it verified that there WAS such a programme. I worried I was making it up!
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hee hee – nope I definitely remembering stumbling across it. No idea which channel though so will go along with your Channel 5 suggestion
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👍
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These are wonderful Margaret
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Ah, thanks Brian.
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That’s a terrific shot from Cadiz, Margaret, and what could be a greater contrast than Chirk Aqueduct? I love them both. Happy Thursday!
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And to you Jo – thank you.
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Some more amazing photos from your collection. I like your idea to include more natural lines which wander through a landscape and not roman roads!
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Ah, Roman Roads are fascinating in one way, but Rolling are so much more fun.
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I think so too as follow natural ups, downs and bends!
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An excellent selectio
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Thanks Sheree.
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Brill
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I love that quote about a line as a ‘visual trail of energy’ 😀 And I love your images too, and the way you describe how some lines lead to an obvious point while others lead we know not where! My favourites are probably the Yorkshire Dales road and the Premià de Mar tunnel, although on the latter I would disagree that the graffiti commands our attention more than the distant couple as my eyes were definitely drawn more towards them!
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I think you’re right. In the actual moment though, in ‘real life’, that wasn’t the case. That must have been in my mind.
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Maybe it’s the lack of colour? I think if the graffiti were more colourful I would be drawn to it, but in monochrome the people stand out more.
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Fair point.
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Great set, Margaret! A line in photography can indeed be energetic. Loved the underpass and that road in the Dales…,would love to be driving it!
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Ah, if only, Sue.
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Beautiful images! Love all your selections of the lead king line, these photos are great in black and white, Margaret!
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Ah thanks Amy.
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Very nice and diverse choices. Like Sarah, I find the figures draw our attention more than the graffiti.
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I think you’re right actually.
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Beautiful examples of leading lines that bring the reader into the picture, sometimes to see a destination and sometimes to let their imagination take them away.
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It was quite good fun finding the shotd – thanks,
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I really enjoyed this collection and thinking about ‘leading lines’. I particularly like the Chirk Aqueduct photo.
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It’s such an astonishing place too. A canal, supported on an aqueduct, and a viaduct too in virtually the same place.
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I have just looked it up (not having heard of it before). It is totally astonishing! Thanks for introducing me to such a wonder!
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It really is a lot to take in when you see it!
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I am trying to imagine it!
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The leading line. Thanks for teaching me this concept. Your shots embody it well.
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Thank you! Quite a few posts today are popping up with good examples.
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I’m speechless and will ramble, Margaret. These are phenomenal photos. You gave us a guide for leading lines. The gallery is beautiful all around, but I am very partial to the Rolling English Road. Beautiful!
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Ah thanks so much Egidio. I’m partial to a Rolling English Road myself!
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I love the thought – “A Line is a Visual Trial of Energy.”
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Yes. A visual trial would be a challenge!
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It would indeed!! But what a feat!!!
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Wonderful collection. I found your opening shot of Cadiz the most striking, but the one that actually makes me want to be there is the rolling road. You can keep the foggy one, we’ve had enough of that!
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Yep, we do foggy November too (Three rivers nearby …). But I remember that foggy walk with fondness, as the skies very gradually cleared revealing the landscape beyond.
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woah – that first shot. Works so well – what an opening statement, well photograph
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Thanks Becky!
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These are fanatastic Margaret, you have so many good ones, but the aqueduct really grabbed my attention.
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Oh it does in real life too, Leanne. It’s an astonishing achievement. Thanks!
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Lovely, especially the Aqueduct and the Viaduct!
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They’re special!
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