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  • A pregnant woman making 'Bun' rice noodles outside her home in Mach Trang village, Hanoi, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    24 Mach Trang_1.jpg
  • A woman making 'Mien' canna flour noodles in Huu Tu village, Hanoi, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    25 Huu Tu_1.jpg
  • A women eating Pho noodle soup for breakfast at a streetside cafe, Ho Chi Minh City (formerly Saigon), Vietnam
    SFE_080222_0021.jpg
  • A local woman cooking noodle soup (Pho) to sell at the small monthly market in the Khmu village of Ban Phatao, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. The market traders travel along the Nam Ou visiting different villages selling every kind of Chinese and Vietnamese product that one might need - like biscuits and flip flops, washing powder and salt. Ban Phatao will soon be temporarily relocating away from the Nam Ou river due to the construction of the Nam Ou Cascade Hydropower Project Dam 5.
    DSCF2855cc_1.jpg
  • A landscape of a Noodle Restaurant at the Elephant & Castle shopping centre in Southwark, south London, on 7th May 2019, in London, England.
    bus_journey-08-07-05-2019.jpg
  • London, UK. Thursday 10th October 2013. The winner Alan Duncan MP and Noodle, a Cocker Spaniel / Poodle cross. MPs and their dogs competing in the Westminster Dog of the Year competition celebrates the unique bond between man and dog - and aims to promote responsible dog ownership.
    20131010_westminster dog of the year...jpg
  • London, UK. Thursday 10th October 2013. The winner Alan Duncan MP and Noodle, a Cocker Spaniel / Poodle cross. MPs and their dogs competing in the Westminster Dog of the Year competition celebrates the unique bond between man and dog - and aims to promote responsible dog ownership.
    20131010_westminster dog of the year...jpg
  • London, UK. Thursday 10th October 2013. The winner Alan Duncan MP and Noodle, a Cocker Spaniel / Poodle cross. MPs and their dogs competing in the Westminster Dog of the Year competition celebrates the unique bond between man and dog - and aims to promote responsible dog ownership.
    20131010_westminster dog of the year...jpg
  • London, UK. Thursday 10th October 2013. The winner Alan Duncan MP and Noodle, a Cocker Spaniel / Poodle cross. MPs and their dogs competing in the Westminster Dog of the Year competition celebrates the unique bond between man and dog - and aims to promote responsible dog ownership.
    20131010_westminster dog of the year...jpg
  • London, UK. Thursday 10th October 2013. The winner Alan Duncan MP and Noodle, a Cocker Spaniel / Poodle cross. MPs and their dogs competing in the Westminster Dog of the Year competition celebrates the unique bond between man and dog - and aims to promote responsible dog ownership.
    20131010_westminster dog of the year...jpg
  • London, UK. Thursday 10th October 2013. The winner Alan Duncan MP and Noodle, a Cocker Spaniel / Poodle cross. MPs and their dogs competing in the Westminster Dog of the Year competition celebrates the unique bond between man and dog - and aims to promote responsible dog ownership.
    20131010_westminster dog of the year...jpg
  • London, UK. Thursday 10th October 2013. The winner Alan Duncan MP and Noodle, a Cocker Spaniel / Poodle cross. MPs and their dogs competing in the Westminster Dog of the Year competition celebrates the unique bond between man and dog - and aims to promote responsible dog ownership.
    20131010_westminster dog of the year...jpg
  • London, UK. Thursday 10th October 2013. The winner Alan Duncan MP and Noodle, a Cocker Spaniel / Poodle cross. MPs and their dogs competing in the Westminster Dog of the Year competition celebrates the unique bond between man and dog - and aims to promote responsible dog ownership.
    20131010_westminster dog of the year...jpg
  • London, UK. Thursday 10th October 2013. The winner Alan Duncan MP and Noodle, a Cocker Spaniel / Poodle cross. MPs and their dogs competing in the Westminster Dog of the Year competition celebrates the unique bond between man and dog - and aims to promote responsible dog ownership.
    20131010_westminster dog of the year...jpg
  • London, UK. Thursday 10th October 2013. The winner Alan Duncan MP and Noodle, a Cocker Spaniel / Poodle cross. MPs and their dogs competing in the Westminster Dog of the Year competition celebrates the unique bond between man and dog - and aims to promote responsible dog ownership.
    20131010_westminster dog of the year...jpg
  • London, UK. Thursday 10th October 2013. The winner Alan Duncan MP and Noodle, a Cocker Spaniel / Poodle cross. MPs and their dogs competing in the Westminster Dog of the Year competition celebrates the unique bond between man and dog - and aims to promote responsible dog ownership.
    20131010_westminster dog of the year...jpg
  • London, UK. Thursday 10th October 2013. The winner Alan Duncan MP and Noodle, a Cocker Spaniel / Poodle cross. MPs and their dogs competing in the Westminster Dog of the Year competition celebrates the unique bond between man and dog - and aims to promote responsible dog ownership.
    20131010_westminster dog of the year...jpg
  • London, UK. Thursday 10th October 2013. The winner Alan Duncan MP and Noodle, a Cocker Spaniel / Poodle cross. MPs and their dogs competing in the Westminster Dog of the Year competition celebrates the unique bond between man and dog - and aims to promote responsible dog ownership.
    20131010_westminster dog of the year...jpg
  • London, UK. Thursday 10th October 2013. The winner Alan Duncan MP and Noodle, a Cocker Spaniel / Poodle cross. MPs and their dogs competing in the Westminster Dog of the Year competition celebrates the unique bond between man and dog - and aims to promote responsible dog ownership.
    20131010_westminster dog of the year...jpg
  • London, UK. Thursday 10th October 2013. The winner Alan Duncan MP and Noodle, a Cocker Spaniel / Poodle cross. MPs and their dogs competing in the Westminster Dog of the Year competition celebrates the unique bond between man and dog - and aims to promote responsible dog ownership.
    20131010_westminster dog of the year...jpg
  • London, UK. Thursday 10th October 2013. The winner Alan Duncan MP and Noodle, a Cocker Spaniel / Poodle cross. MPs and their dogs competing in the Westminster Dog of the Year competition celebrates the unique bond between man and dog - and aims to promote responsible dog ownership.
    20131010_westminster dog of the year...jpg
  • London, UK. Thursday 10th October 2013. The winner Alan Duncan MP and Noodle, a Cocker Spaniel / Poodle cross. MPs and their dogs competing in the Westminster Dog of the Year competition celebrates the unique bond between man and dog - and aims to promote responsible dog ownership.
    20131010_westminster dog of the year...jpg
  • London, UK. Thursday 10th October 2013. The winner Alan Duncan MP and Noodle, a Cocker Spaniel / Poodle cross. MPs and their dogs competing in the Westminster Dog of the Year competition celebrates the unique bond between man and dog - and aims to promote responsible dog ownership.
    20131010_westminster dog of the year...jpg
  • A man boils noodles in the traditional manner in a pot at a family farm, Tay Ninh, Vietnam
    SFE_080221_0063.jpg
  • Street food for sale on the platform at Danyingone Station on 16th May 2016 in Yangon, Myanmar. Danyingdone Station is one of the 39 stations on the Yangon Circular Railway, Myanmar. The railway, a narrow gauge local commuter trail network serving Yangon metropolitan area is a 28.5 mile 45.9 km 39 station loop system. This British built rail-loop connects Yangon to its satellite towns and villages
    DSCF9719cc_1.jpg
  • Sign for the food and restaurant brand Wagamama in Birmingham, United Kingdom.
    20180704_brands wagamama_002.jpg
  • Sign for the food and restaurant brand Wagamama in Birmingham, United Kingdom.
    20180704_brands wagamama_001.jpg
  • Elephant and Castle shopping centre on 17th September 2015 in Lambeth, South London, United Kingdom.
    Elephant_and_Castle-4731.jpg
  • Rice noodles drying in the sun at Naung Taw village on the banks of Inle Lake on 21st January 2016 in Shan State, Myanmar
    DSCF7545_1_1.jpg
  • On a rainy night in Soho, a man eats noodles overlooking a pedestrianised Dean Street during the coronavirus pandemic, on 27th August 2020, in London, England.
    soho_night26-27-08-2020.jpg
  • Japanese chef making fresh noodles in a restaurant in London. Condensation steams up the window.
    20091213noodle chefA.jpg
  • A Tibetan woman carries an orange plastic bowl and a yellow carrier bag containing rice noodles which she has just purchased from a mobile shop in a village near Zongdian (Shangri-La), Yunnan province, China
    A0009610_1.jpg
  • Near a menu of dishes, a customer eats a lunchtime Chinese meal in the window of a Soho eaterie. A grid of plates stuffed full of food consisting of noodles and rice items has been attached to the restaurant window to entice the customer from the street and onto a table. The man puts a fork of food into his mouth as he chats to an unseen friend at the table and a sign above says the emporium is Open.
    chinese_meal01-16-10-2012_1.jpg
  • Chen Yi He, Chinese Herbalist, having breakfast at home, Xiao Meng Yang town, Xishuangbanna, China
    chiherb_004_1.jpg
  • Steamed Bun, Egg rice and a menu at Boa Japanese restaurant on 2nd November 2015 in London, United Kingdom.
    E-Bao-0338.jpg
  • Pedestrians avoid a noodle and sauce takeaway, dropped and discarded on the pavement during lunch-hour in the capitals financial district, on 4th February 2020, in the City of London, England. The lunchtime meal was being carried along the street when its heat and moisture made it drop through the bottom of a paper bag, turning it upside down and lying perfectly on the pavement as city workers emerged from their offices. Those who saw it in time stepped over the greasy obstacle but the distracted mostly by walking with phones to ears, stepped in it and helping spread it across the pavement.
    pavement_noodles-45-04-02-2020.jpg
  • Pedestrians avoid a noodle and sauce takeaway, dropped and discarded on the pavement during lunch-hour in the capitals financial district, on 4th February 2020, in the City of London, England. The lunchtime meal was being carried along the street when its heat and moisture made it drop through the bottom of a paper bag, turning it upside down and lying perfectly on the pavement as city workers emerged from their offices. Those who saw it in time stepped over the greasy obstacle but the distracted mostly by walking with phones to ears, stepped in it and helping spread it across the pavement.
    pavement_noodles-32-04-02-2020.jpg
  • As the UK government announces further Coronavirus-related restrictions to its citizens, with the immediate closure of pubs, cafes, gyms and cinemas, and the worldwide number of deaths reaching 10,000 with 240,000 cases, 953 of those in London alone, two lone diners eat among empty tables at a noodle restaurant at Borough on the Southbank, on 20th March 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_southbank-31-20-03-2020.jpg
  • A woman prepares a cooked rat caught in the rice fields around Vinh An, a village specialising in catching rats, Hung Yen province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    25030017_1.jpg
  • A worker mixing coal dust with her feet for making bricks for burning in the kilns, Bat Trang ceramic making village, Hanoi; Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    34 Bat Trang_1.jpg
  • Piles of yellow silk on a plastic table at Dai Hung, a village specialising in producing silkworms and thread, Ha Tay province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    23 Dai Hung_1.jpg
  • Hands of a woman making a clay model of a turtle for a mould used for copper casting in Long Thuong village, Hung Yen province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    A 0192_1.jpg
  • A woman preparing bamboo for weaving into baskets in Tang Tien village, Bac Giang province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    25150001_1.jpg
  • A woman weaving a lid for a picnic basket in Lu Thuong Te grass weaving village, Ha Tay province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    33-6_1.jpg
  • Silkworms feeding in bamboo baskets and mulberry leaves drying on the floor in an interior of a home in Chi Dong, silkworm rearing village, Hanoi, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    21 Chi Dong_1.jpg
  • Interior of a home in Luu Thuong village, 'te' grass weaving village, Ha Tay province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    17 Luu Thuong_1.jpg
  • A young woman weaving bamboo baskets sitting on a bed at home in Phu Vinh, Ha Tay province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    15 Phu Vinh_1.jpg
  • Interior of a home in Phu Vinh, rattan and bamboo basket weaving village, Ha Tay province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    09 Phu Vinh_1.jpg
  • Interior of a home in Phu My conical hat making village, Ha Tay province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    08 Phu My_1.jpg
  • Incense sticks drying on the road in Quang Phu Cao village, Hay Tay province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    03 Quang Phu Cao_1.jpg
  • The hands of a man shaping a woven bamboo basket in Tang Tien village, Bac Giang province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    A 0239_1.jpg
  • A man shaping a woven bamboo basket in Tang Tien village, Bac Giang province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    A 0237_1.jpg
  • Woman preparing bamboo for making a traditonal palm leaf hat in Uoc Le village, Ha Tay province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    93300001_1.jpg
  • Woman preparing 'te' grass for weaving into baskets in Luu Thuong village, Ha Tay province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    93270007_1.jpg
  • Woman preparing bamboo for weaving into baskets in Tang Tien village, Bac Giang province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    25160002_1.jpg
  • Interior of a house in Cao, a village specialising in making incense sticks, Hung Yen province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    40 Cao_1.jpg
  • Interior of a house in Duong O paper making village, Bac Ninh province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    38 Duong O_1.jpg
  • Interior of a house in Tam Hiep, a village specialising in making children's soft toys, Ha Tay province, Vietnam. The dust from the fabric causes the workers problems with respiratory disease. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    36 Tam Hiep_1.jpg
  • Interior of a village house in Thuy Ung water buffalo horn processing village, Ha Tay province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    35 Thuy Ung_1.jpg
  • Making 'Banh Da' crispy rice and sesame cakes in Tieu village, Bac Giang province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    30 Tieu_1.jpg
  • Village market selling the materials needed to make Banh Gai, a type of rice cake in Yen So, Ha Tay province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    28 Yen So_1.jpg
  • Interior of a house in Thanh Khuc, a village specialising in making Banh Chung, a square glutinous rice cake wrapped in banana leaves, Hanoi, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    27 Thanh Khuc_1.jpg
  • A young girl sits with her mother while she weaves baskets, Luu Thuong, 'Te' grass weaving village, Ha Tay province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    18 Luu Thuong_1.jpg
  • Interior of a home in Kim Chinh, sedge basket weaving village, Ninh Binh province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    16 Kim Chinh_1.jpg
  • Interior of a home in Ninh So, bamboo basket weaving village, Ha Tay province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    13 Ninh So_1.jpg
  • Hands of a woman weaving a bamboo basket in Tang Tien village, Bac Giang province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    10 Tang Tien_1.jpg
  • A man dyes bamboo sticks for making incense sticks in Tao Duong, Ha Tay province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    04 Tao Duong_1.jpg
  • Hands of a woman making a clay model of a turtle for a mould used for copper casting in Long Thuong village, Hung Yen province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    A 0186_1.jpg
  • A young woman folds paper made in Duong O village which specialises in making traditional paper from bark, Bac Ninh province, Vietnam.  With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    93270020_1.jpg
  • A woman weaving a bamboo basket in Tang Tien village, Bac Giang province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    25140001_1.jpg
  • Interior of a workshop making decorative animal heads using real horns from deer and water buffalo in Thuy Ung, water buffalo horn processing village, Ha Tay province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    195-06_1_1.jpg
  • A woman cooks a rat caught in the rice fields around Vinh An, a village specialising in catching rats, Hung Yen province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    44 Vinh An_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a female worker covered in dust in Cao, a village specialising in making incense sticks, Hung Yen province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    39 Cao_1.jpg
  • Hands of a woman making Banh Chung, a square glutinous rice cake in Thanh Khuc village, Hanoi, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    26 Banh Chung_1.jpg
  • A two month old baby boy asleep in a hammock in Tang Tien, a bamboo basket weaving village, Bac Giang province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    11 Tang Tien 2_1.jpg
  • Xuan Lai - bamboo furniture making village, Bac Giang province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    05 Xuan Lai_1.jpg
  • As the UK government announces further Coronavirus-related restrictions to its citizens, with the immediate closure of pubs, cafes, gyms and cinemas, and the worldwide number of deaths reaching 10,000 with 240,000 cases, 953 of those in London alone, two lone diners eat among empty tables at a noodle restaurant at Borough on the Southbank, on 20th March 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_southbank-34-20-03-2020.jpg
  • Woman preparing bamboo for weaving into baskets in Tang Tien village, Bac Giang province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    25160003_1.jpg
  • A woman embroiders a picture at home in Quat Dong embroidery village, Ha Tay province, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    29 Quat Dong_1.jpg
  • Silk cocoons on a hatching rack in a home in Chi Dong village, silk worm rearing village, Hanoi, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    22 Chi Dong__1.jpg
  • A woman picks mulberry leaves to feed silkworms in Chi Dong village, Hanoi, Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    20 Picking mulberry_1.jpg
  • A Vietnamese woman eating a bowl of noodles whilst selling fish at the local fresh market in the coastal fishing village of Ninh Hai, Ninh Thuan province, Central Vietnam. A large variety of exotic fish are available for sale in fresh Vietnamese markets such as this, all being sold on small individual stalls.
    DSCF3853cc_1.jpg
  • Nguyen Thi Bin, 84 sits at the 100 year old Trung Bac restaurant where she has lived all her life. The restaurant specialises in noodles soaked in wood ash to give them a special texture
    SFE_080223_0069.jpg
  • A woman wearing a Hello Kitty apron eats a bowl of noodles at a market in Zhujiao Township, Chuzhou, Anhui Province, China on 02 March, 2011.  Chuzhou is the city where Dongdaxu Village is located, the ancestral home of current Chinese vice premier Li Keqiang, slated to be the next premier and the man in charge of China's economic transformation
    QS110302Chuzhou034.jpg
  • A man eats a bowl of noodles while manning a vegetable stall at a fresh food market in Shanghai, China, on Saturday, Dec. 5, 2015.
    QilaiShen_00236.jpg
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