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  • An unidentified father in the act of pouring coffee from a cafetiere into two metallic silver mugs in while holding his sleeping baby son in his London kitchen. The unconscious child is a few months old and the parent stands expertly holding both hot liquid and infant as if juggling pleasure and parenthood simultaneously. The sleeping child is limp in the father's arm and is dressed in the same scarlet red as the vibrant colour on the wall behind. We only see the man's upper-legs and torso but the baby is tiny against his body making the scale of both young and old. otherwise, the generic room is bare of decoration or possessions - only a drying cloth and chopping board is seen on the draining board, near plain white tiles.
    children20-30-08-2007_1.jpg
  • Black Sheep Coffee hatch at Aldgate station on 26th November 2019 in London, England, United Kingdom. Black Sheep Coffee is a London-based coffee chain, which grew from a stall in North London to became a business worth over £100 million in only a few years without using any single-use plastics for their own products.
    20191126_black sheep coffee_001.jpg
  • Men stading drinking coffee outside The Algerian Coffee Stores Soho. On old Compton Street this shop has been in this spot for over a century. Since the doors first opened in 1887 coffee and tea have dominated the shops atmosphere. Today, 123 years later, the Algerian Coffee Stores has evolved into one of the worlds best known and leading suppliers of coffee and tea.
    20110118algerian coffee storesA.jpg
  • Coffee of all varieties at Algerian Coffee Stores on 7th October 2015 In London, United Kingdom. Algerian Coffee Stores along Old Compton Street in Soho. The store has been open since 1887 selling coffees and teas
    D- Algerian Coffee Stores-6237.jpg
  • Algerian Coffee Stores on 7th October 2015 In London, United Kingdom. Algerian Coffee Stores along Old Compton Street in Soho. The store has been open since 1887 selling coffees and teas
    D- Algerian Coffee Stores-6249.jpg
  • Algerian Coffee Stores on 7th October 2015 In London, United Kingdom. Algerian Coffee Stores along Old Compton Street in Soho. The store has been open since 1887 selling coffees and teas
    D- Algerian Coffee Stores-6244.jpg
  • Algerian Coffee Stores on 7th October 2015 In London, United Kingdom. Algerian Coffee Stores along Old Compton Street in Soho. The store has been open since 1887 selling coffees and teas
    D- Algerian Coffee Stores-6243.jpg
  • Algerian Coffee Stores on 7th October 2015 In London, United Kingdom. Algerian Coffee Stores along Old Compton Street in Soho. The store has been open since 1887 selling coffees and teas
    D- Algerian Coffee Stores-6231.jpg
  • A Starbucks coffee cup sitting on a table outside Starbucks coffee shop, Canary Wharf. London, UK.
    UK-Starbucks-Coffee-Shop-0047.jpg
  • Customers drink coffee in the window of a Starbucks coffee shop in the city of London.
    UK-Starbucks-Coffee-Shop-6075.jpg
  • A Starbucks coffee cup sitting on a table outside Starbucks coffee shop, Canary Wharf. London, UK.
    UK-Starbucks-Coffee-Shop-0052.jpg
  • A Starbucks coffee cup sitting on a table outside Starbucks coffee shop, Canary Wharf. London, UK.
    UK-Starbucks-Coffee-Shop-0066.jpg
  • A Starbucks coffee cup sitting on a table outside Starbucks coffee shop, Canary Wharf. London, UK.
    UK-Starbucks-Coffee-Shop-0050.jpg
  • As a 1990s window cleaner stands on his ladders outside in the street, two women talk in the window of a branch of Seattle Coffee Company the City of London aka The Square Mile, the capitals financial centre, on 21st June 1997, in London, England.
    seattle_coffee-21-06-1997.jpg
  • Tourists pass the Charles Dickens Coffee House in Covent Garden, London.
    14062011charles dickens coffee house...jpg
  • ISIS Coffee Shop in Hay-on-Wye, Wales, United Kingdom.
    20180317_isis coffee_001.jpg
  • Lunchtime city workers queue for free coffee courtesy of The Economist magazine. With the promise of a freebie, the waiting crowd line up near a sign telling passers-by they can enjoy a hot beverage provided by the Financial and News magazine published in London. The marketing and PR plan seems to be working for this publication, eager to promote their brand with a free copy and a limited subscription sign-up period.
    coffee_queue01-13-08-2014.jpg
  • The Starbucks sign outside a coffee shop in the City of London.
    UK-Starbucks-Coffee-Shop-6073.jpg
  • Tourists pass the Charles Dickens Coffee House in Covent Garden, London.
    14062011charles dickens coffee house...jpg
  • People chatting away at Monmouth Coffee at Borough Market, London, UK. Saturday is the businest day, with crowds of people coming to sample food and hang out in the cafes and restaurants. Borough Market is a wholesale and retail food market in Southwark, Central London, England. It is one of the largest and oldest food markets in London and sells a large variety of foods from all over the world.
    20150124_monmouth coffee_B.jpg
  • People chatting away at Monmouth Coffee at Borough Market, London, UK. Saturday is the businest day, with crowds of people coming to sample food and hang out in the cafes and restaurants. Borough Market is a wholesale and retail food market in Southwark, Central London, England. It is one of the largest and oldest food markets in London and sells a large variety of foods from all over the world.
    20150124_monmouth coffee_A.jpg
  • A detail of a puddle and dribble of spilled and squashed Caffe Nero coffee, on 5th January 2019, in London, England.
    coffee_puddle-02-05-02-2019.jpg
  • Old Citroen van doubles up as a coffee stall. People out enjoying the unseasonally hot weather as a summertime heat wave hits London and the UK in what should be Autumn. Summer prolonged in a heatwave which results in a packed Hyde Park as families and friends try to soak up the last rays of sunshine and warmth in this Indian Summer.
    20111002citroen coffee vanA.jpg
  • A Hmong ethnic minority woman in Ban Long Lan harvests Arabica coffee cherries for ‘Saffron coffee’, Luang Prabang province, Lao PDR. The coffee is grown in the high mountain peaks and plateaus in Luang Prabang over 800 meters above sea level. In November, December and January Saffron Coffee coffee farmers gather all of their family members to hand pick only the red-ripe cherries. It will take several passes over these few months to harvest all of them. These farmers were once producers of opium, but who have been impoverished by lack of a replacement crop in the wake of opium’s prohibition by the Lao government. Saffron Coffee’s goal in helping these farmers grow coffee is to give them a viable and sustainable cash crop, developing their economy, and thus giving them the ability to buy medicines and send their children to school.
    A0020476cc_1.jpg
  • A Hmong ethnic minority woman in Ban Long Lan carries a bowl of Arabica coffee cherries harvested for ‘Saffron coffee’, Luang Prabang province, Lao PDR. The coffee is grown in the high mountain peaks and plateaus in Luang Prabang over 800 meters above sea level. In November, December and January Saffron Coffee coffee farmers gather all of their family members to hand pick only the red-ripe cherries. It will take several passes over these few months to harvest all of them. These farmers were once producers of opium, but who have been impoverished by lack of a replacement crop in the wake of opium’s prohibition by the Lao government. Saffron Coffee’s goal in helping these farmers grow coffee is to give them a viable and sustainable cash crop, developing their economy, and thus giving them the ability to buy medicines and send their children to school.
    A0020493cc_1.jpg
  • With her baby on her back, a Hmong ethnic minority woman in Ban Long Lan harvests Arabica coffee cherries for ‘Saffron coffee’, Luang Prabang province, Lao PDR. The coffee is grown in the high mountain peaks and plateaus in Luang Prabang over 800 meters above sea level. In November, December and January Saffron Coffee coffee farmers gather all of their family members to hand pick only the red-ripe cherries. It will take several passes over these few months to harvest all of them. These farmers were once producers of opium, but who have been impoverished by lack of a replacement crop in the wake of opium’s prohibition by the Lao government. Saffron Coffee’s goal in helping these farmers grow coffee is to give them a viable and sustainable cash crop, developing their economy, and thus giving them the ability to buy medicines and send their children to school.
    A0020482cc_1.jpg
  • A Hmong ethnic minority woman in Ban Long Lan harvests Arabica coffee cherries for ‘Saffron coffee’, Luang Prabang province, Lao PDR. The coffee is grown in the high mountain peaks and plateaus in Luang Prabang over 800 meters above sea level. In November, December and January Saffron Coffee coffee farmers gather all of their family members to hand pick only the red-ripe cherries. It will take several passes over these few months to harvest all of them. These farmers were once producers of opium, but who have been impoverished by lack of a replacement crop in the wake of opium’s prohibition by the Lao government. Saffron Coffee’s goal in helping these farmers grow coffee is to give them a viable and sustainable cash crop, developing their economy, and thus giving them the ability to buy medicines and send their children to school.
    A0020467cc_1.jpg
  • A Hmong ethnic minority woman in Ban Long Lan carries a sack of Arabica coffee cherries harvested for ‘Saffron coffee’, Luang Prabang province, Lao PDR. The coffee is grown in the high mountain peaks and plateaus in Luang Prabang over 800 meters above sea level. In November, December and January Saffron Coffee coffee farmers gather all of their family members to hand pick only the red-ripe cherries. It will take several passes over these few months to harvest all of them. These farmers were once producers of opium, but who have been impoverished by lack of a replacement crop in the wake of opium’s prohibition by the Lao government. Saffron Coffee’s goal in helping these farmers grow coffee is to give them a viable and sustainable cash crop, developing their economy, and thus giving them the ability to buy medicines and send their children to school.
    A0020463cc.jpg
  • With her baby on her back, a Hmong ethnic minority woman in Ban Long Lan harvests Arabica coffee cherries for ‘Saffron coffee’, Luang Prabang province, Lao PDR. The coffee is grown in the high mountain peaks and plateaus in Luang Prabang over 800 meters above sea level. In November, December and January Saffron Coffee coffee farmers gather all of their family members to hand pick only the red-ripe cherries. It will take several passes over these few months to harvest all of them. These farmers were once producers of opium, but who have been impoverished by lack of a replacement crop in the wake of opium’s prohibition by the Lao government. Saffron Coffee’s goal in helping these farmers grow coffee is to give them a viable and sustainable cash crop, developing their economy, and thus giving them the ability to buy medicines and send their children to school.
    A0020375cc_1.jpg
  • A barista pours coffee for a waiter to deliver to the table in the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi.<br />
The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100212_198.jpg
  • A woman wearing a face mask receives her take away coffee through the back door of a coffee shop on 27th November 2020 in Hackney, London United Kingdom. During lockdown 2 in England no costumers were allowed into coffee shops so had to put in an order by the door and then wait for their coffee outside. The coffee shop La Bouche in Broadway Market would take their orders through the front and hand out the drinks out the back.
    3E9A0269 1.jpg
  • Roasted coffee beans in bags in a small scale coffee distributor, Ganesh coffee, Madikeri. Coorg or Kadagu is the largest coffee growing region of India, in the state of Karnataka, the inhabitants - the Kodavas have been cultivating crops such as coffee, black pepper and cardamon for many generations.
    _MG_4855_1_1_1.jpg
  • A barista warms milk for coffee from an ancient espresso machine in the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi, India.The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100205_005.jpg
  • Portrait of the owner of Ganesh coffee, Madikeri. Coorg or Kadagu is the largest coffee growing region of India, in the state of Karnataka, the inhabitants - the Kodavas have been cultivating crops such as coffee, black pepper and cardamon for many generations.
    _MG_4889_1_1_1.jpg
  • Coffee processing factory, worker sweeping up coffee dust. Coorg or Kadagu is the largest coffee growing region of India, in the state of Karnataka, the inhabitants - the Kodavas have been cultivating crops such as coffee, black pepper and cardamon for many generations.
    _MG_5208_1_1_1.jpg
  • Coffee workers picking coffee on a plantation. Coorg or Kadagu is the largest coffee growing region of India, in the state of Karnataka, the inhabitants - the Kodavas have been cultivating crops such as coffee, black pepper and cardamon for many generations.
    _MG_5137_1_1_1.jpg
  • Coffee workers picking coffee on a plantation. Coorg or Kadagu is the largest coffee growing region of India, in the state of Karnataka, the inhabitants - the Kodavas have been cultivating crops such as coffee, black pepper and cardamon for many generations.
    _MG_5084_1_1_1.jpg
  • Coffee workers picking coffee on a plantation. Coorg or Kadagu is the largest coffee growing region of India, in the state of Karnataka, the inhabitants - the Kodavas have been cultivating crops such as coffee, black pepper and cardamon for many generations.
    _MG_5078_1_1_1.jpg
  • Coffee workers picking coffee on a plantation. Coorg or Kadagu is the largest coffee growing region of India, in the state of Karnataka, the inhabitants - the Kodavas have been cultivating crops such as coffee, black pepper and cardamon for many generations.
    _MG_5042_1_1_1.jpg
  • Husked coffee beans being roasted, Ganesh coffee, Madikeri. Coorg or Kadagu is the largest coffee growing region of India, in the state of Karnataka, the inhabitants - the Kodavas have been cultivating crops such as coffee, black pepper and cardamon for many generations.
    _MG_4826_1_1_1.jpg
  • Coffee workers picking coffee on a plantation. Coorg or Kadagu is the largest coffee growing region of India, in the state of Karnataka, the inhabitants - the Kodavas have been cultivating crops such as coffee, black pepper and cardamon for many generations.
    _MG_5131_1_1_1.jpg
  • Coffee workers pickers carrying bags of coffee on their heads on a plantation. Coorg or Kadagu is the largest coffee growing region of India, in the state of Karnataka, the inhabitants - the Kodavas have been cultivating crops such as coffee, black pepper and cardamon for many generations.
    _MG_4953_1_1_1.jpg
  • Husked coffee beans being roasted, Ganesh coffee, Madikeri. Coorg or Kadagu is the largest coffee growing region of India, in the state of Karnataka, the inhabitants - the Kodavas have been cultivating crops such as coffee, black pepper and cardamon for many generations.
    _MG_4834_1_1_1.jpg
  • Susan Nangobi, aged 14, works with her father, a coffee farmer, when she’s not at school. Susan holds a basket of freshly picked coffee beans that are ready to be dried before being taken to the Kulika centre to be sold to Ibero Coffee company. They are in the Kamuli region of Uganda. The Kulika project run Sustainable Organic Agricultural Training Programs.
    20-07-uganda_4588.jpg
  • Patrick Kajjura and Albert, one of his eight sons, pick their coffee beans that are ready for drying before going to the Kulika centre to be sold to Ibero Coffee. Their coffee plants are in the Kamuli region of Uganda. The Kulika project run Sustainable Organic Agricultural Training Programs.
    07-uganda_4487.jpg
  • Monica Kigwa a coffee farmer holding a new seedling. Monica is suffering from Malaria, she is a widow with 4 children and 2 adopted kids. She produced 174 Kgs of coffee in 2006 after being re-trained by Kulika. Monica lives in the Kamuli district of Uganda. Coffee in the area is not organic but is Fair Trade. The Kulika project run Sustainable Organic Agricultural Training Programs.
    07-uganda_4423.jpg
  • Antique posters advertising coffee in the Indian Coffee House. Jaipur, India
    SFE_111029_087_1.jpg
  • A sign for the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi.<br />
The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100212_169.jpg
  • Coffee beans detail shot. Coorg or Kadagu is the largest coffee growing region of India, in the state of Karnataka, the inhabitants - the Kodavas have been cultivating crops such as coffee, black pepper and cardamon for many generations.
    _MG_5275_1_1_1.jpg
  • Coffee plants leaves beans on the plant, green, detail shot. Coorg or Kadagu is the largest coffee growing region of India, in the state of Karnataka, the inhabitants - the Kodavas have been cultivating crops such as coffee, black pepper and cardamon for many generations.
    _MG_4967_1_1_1.jpg
  • Three 3 Indian Hindu men standing outside their house on a coffee plantation. Coorg or Kadagu is the largest coffee growing region of India, in the state of Karnataka, the inhabitants - the Kodavas have been cultivating crops such as coffee, black pepper and cardamon for many generations.
    _MG_4681_1_1_1.jpg
  • A kitchen hand in the the Indian Coffee House looks over the wall for monkeys, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi.<br />
The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100212_219.jpg
  • A cook chops onions in the kitchen of the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi.<br />
The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100212_199.jpg
  • A man smokes a cigarette in the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi.<br />
The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100212_172.jpg
  • A portrait of a waiter with a turbaned headress and cumberbund in the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi.<br />
The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100212_139.jpg
  • Men sit and talk in the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi.<br />
The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100212_133.jpg
  • A portrait of a kitchen hand in the the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi.<br />
The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100212_060.jpg
  • A man addresses labels onto envelopes in the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi.<br />
The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100212_085.jpg
  • An elderly man reads a newspaper in the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi.<br />
The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100212_058.jpg
  • Details of a workers uniform in the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi.<br />
The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100212_039.jpg
  • A portrait of a kitchen hand in the the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi.<br />
The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100212_018.jpg
  • A woman in a red dress sits in the the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi.<br />
The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100212_013.jpg
  • A portrait of a customer in the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi, India.The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100205_159.jpg
  • A portrait of a customer in the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi, India.The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100205_201.jpg
  • Details of worn and chipped cups and cutlery and a pair of glasses in the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi, India.The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100205_193.jpg
  • Detail of the menu board in the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi, India.The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100205_125.jpg
  • A worker making a South Indian snack called a dosa on the hotplate in the kitchen of the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi, India.The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100205_082.jpg
  • A worker making a South Indian snack called a dosa on the hotplate in the kitchen of the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi, India.The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100205_080.jpg
  • Details of a machine making a sambhar (sauce) in the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi, India.The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100205_059.jpg
  • A worker washes cups in the kitchen in the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi, India.The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100205_057.jpg
  • Detail of a spatula and sieve in the kitchen of the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi, India.The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100205_056.jpg
  • Coffee processing factory, beans ready for export. Coorg or Kadagu is the largest coffee growing region of India, in the state of Karnataka, the inhabitants - the Kodavas have been cultivating crops such as coffee, black pepper and cardamon for many generations.
    _MG_5233_1_1_1.jpg
  • Coffee processing factory, beans ready for export. Coorg or Kadagu is the largest coffee growing region of India, in the state of Karnataka, the inhabitants - the Kodavas have been cultivating crops such as coffee, black pepper and cardamon for many generations.
    _MG_5227_1_1_1.jpg
  • Coffee processing factory, beans ready for export. Coorg or Kadagu is the largest coffee growing region of India, in the state of Karnataka, the inhabitants - the Kodavas have been cultivating crops such as coffee, black pepper and cardamon for many generations.
    _MG_5220_1_1_1.jpg
  • Owner of a coffee plantation in front of his Jeep, potrait. Coorg or Kadagu is the largest coffee growing region of India, in the state of Karnataka, the inhabitants - the Kodavas have been cultivating crops such as coffee, black pepper and cardamon for many generations.
    _MG_4979_1_1_1.jpg
  • Coffee plants leaves beans on the plant, green, detail shot. Coorg or Kadagu is the largest coffee growing region of India, in the state of Karnataka, the inhabitants - the Kodavas have been cultivating crops such as coffee, black pepper and cardamon for many generations.
    _MG_4966_1_1_1.jpg
  • Coffee beans drying in the sun with workers around. Coorg or Kadagu is the largest coffee growing region of India, in the state of Karnataka, the inhabitants - the Kodavas have been cultivating crops such as coffee, black pepper and cardamon for many generations.
    _MG_4908_1_1_1.jpg
  • Sun breaking through the trees on a coffee plantation. Coorg or Kadagu is the largest coffee growing region of India, in the state of Karnataka, the inhabitants - the Kodavas have been cultivating crops such as coffee, black pepper and cardamon for many generations.
    _MG_4729_1_1_1.jpg
  • Coffee farm / buldings in the hills. Coorg or Kadagu is the largest coffee growing region of India, in the state of Karnataka, the inhabitants - the Kodavas have been cultivating crops such as coffee, black pepper and cardamon for many generations.
    _MG_4698_1_1_1.jpg
  • Indian man collecting coffee beans that have been drying in the sun. Coorg or Kadagu is the largest coffee growing region of India, in the state of Karnataka, the inhabitants - the Kodavas have been cultivating crops such as coffee, black pepper and cardamon for many generations.
    _MG_4521_1_1_1.jpg
  • Indian man collecting coffee beans that have been drying in the sun. Coorg or Kadagu is the largest coffee growing region of India, in the state of Karnataka, the inhabitants - the Kodavas have been cultivating crops such as coffee, black pepper and cardamon for many generations.
    _MG_4512_1_1_1.jpg
  • Indian man collecting coffee beans that have been drying in the sun. Coorg or Kadagu is the largest coffee growing region of India, in the state of Karnataka, the inhabitants - the Kodavas have been cultivating crops such as coffee, black pepper and cardamon for many generations.
    _MG_4492_1_1_1.jpg
  • Coffee beans drying in the sun. Coorg or Kadagu is the largest coffee growing region of India, in the state of Karnataka, the inhabitants - the Kodavas have been cultivating crops such as coffee, black pepper and cardamon for many generations.
    _MG_4248_1_1_1.jpg
  • Detail of the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi, India.The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientele is still well read and intellectual. new Delhi, India
    SFE_110222_046.jpg
  • Detail of the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi, India.The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientele is still well read and intellectual. new Delhi, India
    SFE_110222_015.jpg
  • A monkey walks between table of customers on the terrace of the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi.<br />
The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100212_168.jpg
  • A portrait of a kitchen hand in the the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi.<br />
The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100212_033.jpg
  • The hand of the cashier and a ledger in the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi.<br />
The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100212_006.jpg
  • A man reads a newspaper on the roof terrace of the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi, India.The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100205_178.jpg
  • A waiter serves customers in the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi, India.The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100205_158.jpg
  • Portraits of the cashier in the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi, India.The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100205_090.jpg
  • A man reads a newspaper on the roof terrace of the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi, India.The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100205_098.jpg
  • Portraits of a worker in the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi, India.The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100205_072.jpg
  • A man reads a newspaper on the roof terrace of the Indian Coffee House, Baba Kharak Singh Marg, New Delhi, India.The Coffee House dates back almost fifty years, first in central Connaught Place, then Janpath and now at the top of a rather shabby shopping centre. Still run by the Indian Coffee Workers Cooperative Society, it was a regular haunt for politicos in Delhi and It's clientelle is still well read and intellectual.
    SFE_100205_003.jpg
  • Coffee plants leaves beans on the plant, green, detail shot. Coorg or Kadagu is the largest coffee growing region of India, in the state of Karnataka, the inhabitants - the Kodavas have been cultivating crops such as coffee, black pepper and cardamon for many generations.
    _MG_4973_1_1_1.jpg
  • Coffee plants leaves beans on the plant, green, detail shot. Coorg or Kadagu is the largest coffee growing region of India, in the state of Karnataka, the inhabitants - the Kodavas have been cultivating crops such as coffee, black pepper and cardamon for many generations.
    _MG_4958_1_1_1.jpg
  • Coffee beans drying in the sun. Coorg or Kadagu is the largest coffee growing region of India, in the state of Karnataka, the inhabitants - the Kodavas have been cultivating crops such as coffee, black pepper and cardamon for many generations.
    _MG_4899_1_1_1.jpg
  • Coffee beans drying in the sun. Coorg or Kadagu is the largest coffee growing region of India, in the state of Karnataka, the inhabitants - the Kodavas have been cultivating crops such as coffee, black pepper and cardamon for many generations.
    _MG_4245_1_1_1.jpg
  • A couple sit and talk Customers in the Indian Coffee House in Nagpur, India, shielded by thick curtains from the afternoon sun. The Indian Coffee Houses are a national chain of worker-owned cafes that were integral to Indias pre and post Indepence movements.
    SFE_140309_151.jpg
  • A couple sit and talk Customers in the Indian Coffee House in Nagpur, India, shielded by thick curtains from the afternoon sun. The Indian Coffee Houses are a national chain of worker-owned cafes that were integral to Indias pre and post Indepence movements.
    SFE_140309_068.jpg
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