All four Beatles gathered at EMI Studios on the morning of Friday 8
August 1969 for one of the most famous photo shoots of their career.
Photographer Iain Macmillan took the famous image that adorned their
last-recorded album, Abbey Road.
Here is a photograph taken on the same day, showing the empty crossing.
Iain Macmillan was a freelance photographer and a friend to John and Yoko Ono. He used a Hasselblad camera with a 50mm wide-angle lens, aperture f22, at 1/500 seconds.
Prior to the shoot, Paul had sketched his ideas for the cover, to which Macmillan added a more detailed illustration.
As the group waited outside the studio for the shoot to begin, Linda McCartney took a number of extra photographs.
A policeman held up the traffic as Macmillan, from a stepladder
positioned in the middle of the road, took six shots as the group walked
across the zebra crossing just outside the studio.
The Beatles crossed the road a number of times while Macmillan
photographed them. 8 August was a hot day in north London, and for four
of the six photographs McCartney walked barefoot; for the other two he
wore sandals.
Shortly after the shoot, McCartney studied the transparencies and
chose the fifth one for the album cover. It was the only one when all
four Beatles were walking in time. It also satisfied The Beatles' desire
for the world to see them walking away from the studios they had spent
so much of the last seven years inside.
Macmillan also took a photograph of a nearby tiled street sign for
the back cover. The sign has since been replaced, but was situated at
the corner of Abbey Road and Alexandra Road.
The junction no longer
exists; the road was later replaced by the Abbey Road housing estate,
between Boundary Road and Belsize Road.
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