
Goodwood 2025: Through a Vintage Lens (Part One)



If you had a look at Goodwood 2025: Through a Vintage Lens (Part One), you will know what makes me tick.
Through Expired Film Club, I photograph sporting events using old film cameras.
And one of my favourite things about shooting motorsport is that it’s a lot more open to people bringing in their own kit to capture their own stories.
With a hillclimb, you pretty much have free reign to choose where at the side of the track you want to be, so everyone gets a different perspective. That’s different to ball sports, where everyone is seeing the same thing happening on the pitch, but from a different angle.



“Motorsport provides behind the scenes access to anyone with a camera in a way that you simply don’t see in other sports.”Miles Myerscough-Harris






“Film really lends itself to this documentary type of behind-the-scenes imagery”Miles Myerscough-Harris

With motorsport you could find yourself seeing something that nobody else is witnessing because you’ll never get a view of the whole circuit.
Motorsport provides behind the scenes access to anyone with a camera in a way that you simply don’t see in other sports.
The Goodwood Festival of Speed is one the best examples of that. The images that I’ve chosen for this gallery are intended to tell that story and bring the viewer behind the scenes with me.








Miles Myerscough-Harris is Expired Film Club, looking at the world through a vintage lens