Chime Ding Cast Tin

Bells have long been used to mark time – so much so the word “clock” comes from “clocca”, Medieval Latin for “bell”. In Britain bells were first used to punctuate the day by the Romans; by 600AD bells were common in monasteries and soon after they moved into churches.

In the 14th century bells started to go secular, added to buildings such as castles and council chambers; bells must have been in demand, which is perhaps why Johannes de Stafford started making them. He set up the business the Taylor family took over in 1784, the Taylor Bell Foundry becoming famed for its beautiful-sounding bells.

But clocks have evolved to mark ever-smaller increments of time. In the 14th century only capable of measuring hours, they soon became accurate enough to add minutes, then seconds, then milliseconds, and more. Church towers became pocket watches then wristwatches, then phones; bells just couldn’t keep up. Once at the cutting edge, they’re now becoming part of the past.

The Taylor Bell Foundry is the last major foundry in Britain, its workforce custodians of a dying art. This project documents the foundry and the process of making a bell – as you turn the pages you follow the process, step-by-step. The passage of time keeps flowing, now matter how finely its cut.

Words by Diane Smyth

– This series is part of a wider collective project produced through a collaborative process with Mass Collective, featuring images and sounds from the Loughborough Bell Foundry. See the full project here.