In many years Denmark was home to photographers who made their living by taking pictures of farm buildings and industries from the air. The biggest and best known company was 'Sylvest Jensen Luftfoto'. A pilot/photographer made the image and later sales men would show up on the properties photographed to sell the images. Not many farms or smaller industries in Denmark lacked such a photograph. My grandfather had one of his small farm, framed and hung on a wall in the living room.
All this flying and photographing means that Nystrup Gravel was most likely photographed from the air - perhaps more than once. All the Sylvest Jensen-negatives (some are glass plate) are kept at the Royal Danish Library where I and a friend had the chance to view the collection almost 15 years ago. As the collection is huge and catalogued in a simple note book system it wasn't easy to research. The Royal Danish Library has just started to digitalize the collection which will make it easy to navigate. For now, though, only the island of Fyn is online - and still incomplete. Anyone with knowledge of Danish (effectively reducing the number of users to some 5 mio.) can search and view the collection at the Royal Danish Library's site: Denmark seen from the air - before Google.
I can only sit and wait for that wonderful aerial photograph of the sorting facilities at Nystrup, the gravel pits themselves or maybe even a lucky shot of one of the small trains running along the tracks.
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