NEWS
Ian Fleming On The Set Of Dr. No
BECOME A FLEMING INSIDER > JOIN HERE
Ian Fleming On The Set Of Dr. No
Posted on 2 February, 2026
We take a look at a true piece of James Bond visual history: images capturing the day Ian Fleming visited Pinewood Studios for the filming of Dr. No.
22ndMarch 1962. Ian Fleming heads to Pinewood, Buckinghamshire to visit the set of the first 007 film. He tips off The Sunday Times – his longterm employer – who deploy trusted freelance photographer Frank Herrmann to document the day. The result is a unique series of images captured on one roll of film. We see Fleming’s exploration of the Ken Adam-designed set of Dr. No’s Crab Key underground facility, his meeting with Sean Connery and other members of cast and crew. The Sunday Times has the exclusive and now Frank Herrmann is sharing the day as a limited series of signed and unsigned prints.
Frank Herrmann is widely regarded as one of the outstanding photojournalists of the latter part of the twentieth century, with an illustrious 30 year career at The Sunday Times. Born in Berlin in 1933, he settled in London with his family as a child and went on to capture subjects ranging from Winston Churchill, the Paris ’68 riots and the Yom Kippur War, to the most iconic pop-cultural moments of the day. Granted extraordinarily intimate access, Herrmann would be dispatched at short notice to shoot everything from the recording of Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band at Abbey Road Studios, to Roger Moore filming the first-ever episode of The Saint. As he once said, “It was to be a fly-on-the-wall occasion, which was my favourite way of working, being able to observe people discreetly.” Herrmann’s work is held in many private collections, including the National Portrait Gallery’s permanent collection.

Now at ianflemingshop.com, the Frank Herrmann series of prints, signed, stamped and numbered. The collection includes the numbered Artist’s Proof (£5,000), numbered Contact Sheet (£4,500), open run Contact Sheet print (£195) and a series of 25 signed, stamped and numbered Ian Fleming & Sean Connery prints (£650). These are unframed archival pigment prints. Printed on Hahnemühle Photo Rag 308gsm fine art paper, specially designed for fine art applications – acid and lignin-free, it meets the most exacting requirements for age resistance. The stamp bears the name of long-closed camera shop, Pelling & Cross Ltd of 104 Baker Street, London.



Find the collection here.