Scenes shot on the Keighley & Worth Valley Railway feature in a new television drama being screened this weekend, starring former Coronation Street actress Sarah Lancashire.

Crews spent two days filming at Oakworth Station last May for a new adaptation of the DH Lawrence classic, Sons and Lovers.

The railway was transformed into Oakworth platform, which was re-named Lethley Bridge for the production. The station's Ladies Room was transformed into the Moon and Stars public house, and the booking hall became the Nottingham Station bar, complete with hand pumps, barrel and dozens of bottles of beer.

Three carriages from the Museum of Rail Travel at Ingrow were also used in filming - the Manchester, Sheffield & Lincolnshire Railway four-wheeled tri-composite carriage no 176; the Great Northern Railway carriage built in 1888; and the Metropolitan Railway first-class carriage no 509, built in 1923.

The Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway 0-6-0 steam locomotive no 957 - built in 1887 - was also in action.

Other filming locations used for the production - which as well as Sarah Lancashire stars Rupert Evans, James Murray, Hugo Speer, Georgina Chapman and Keeley Forsyth - included the Isle of Man and Beamish Open Air Museum.

Ingrow Vintage Carriages Trust (VCT) trustee Paul Holroyd said the filming last two days and involved a number of sequences being shot along the line.

Carriages had to be disguised because they were supposed to be from different railway organisations. "Film companies come to us because we have a reputation for knowing what they want," said Mr Holroyd. "And of course there are very few places where they can find Victorian carriages as old as ours which can be so conveniently filmed."

Mr Holroyd said carriages from the Trust have been used in more than 50 films and transported on low loaders to locations as far afield as Birmingham and the Lake District.

Sons and Lovers will be shown on ITV1 on Sunday and Monday at 9pm.