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  • Shanghais old flower market off Rejin Lu, in Shanghai, China. This excellent flower market which sells fresh flowers on the ground floor and fake flowers upstairs is situated in an old communist party building. Sellers and arrangers work through the heat and cold in this exposed building, moving flowers at unbelievably low prices compared to this trade in the West.
    2005-07-01 shanghai 2 030.jpg
  • Shanghais old flower market off Rejin Lu, in Shanghai, China. This excellent flower market which sells fresh flowers on the ground floor and fake flowers upstairs is situated in an old communist party building. Sellers and arrangers work through the heat and cold in this exposed building, moving flowers at unbelievably low prices compared to this trade in the West.
    2005-07-01 shanghai 2 009.jpg
  • Shanghai's old flower market off Rejin Lu, downtown. This excellent flower market which sells fresh flowers on the ground floor and fake flowers upstairs is situated in an old communist party building. Sellers and arrangers work through the heat and cold in this exposed building, moving flowers at unbelievably low prices compared to this trade in the West.
    2005-07-01 shanghai 2 008_alamy_1.jpg
  • Shanghais old flower market off Rejin Lu, in Shanghai, China. This excellent flower market which sells fresh flowers on the ground floor and fake flowers upstairs is situated in an old communist party building. Sellers and arrangers work through the heat and cold in this exposed building, moving flowers at unbelievably low prices compared to this trade in the West.
    2005-07-01 shanghai 2 006.jpg
  • Shanghai's old flower market off Rejin Lu, downtown. This excellent flower market which sells fresh flowers on the ground floor and fake flowers upstairs is situated in an old communist party building. Sellers and arrangers work through the heat and cold in this exposed building, moving flowers at unbelievably low prices compared to this trade in the West.
    2005-06-29 shanghai 049a_alamy_1.jpg
  • Shanghais old flower market off Rejin Lu, in Shanghai, China. This excellent flower market which sells fresh flowers on the ground floor and fake flowers upstairs is situated in an old communist party building. Sellers and arrangers work through the heat and cold in this exposed building, moving flowers at unbelievably low prices compared to this trade in the West.
    2005-07-01 shanghai 2 034.jpg
  • Workers sleeping at Shanghais old flower market off Rejin Lu, in Shanghai, China. This excellent flower market which sells fresh flowers on the ground floor and fake flowers upstairs is situated in an old communist party building. Sellers and arrangers work through the heat and cold in this exposed building, moving flowers at unbelievably low prices compared to this trade in the West.
    2005-07-01 shanghai 2 023.jpg
  • Workers sleeping at Shanghais old flower market off Rejin Lu, in Shanghai, China. This excellent flower market which sells fresh flowers on the ground floor and fake flowers upstairs is situated in an old communist party building. Sellers and arrangers work through the heat and cold in this exposed building, moving flowers at unbelievably low prices compared to this trade in the West.
    2005-07-01 shanghai 2 018.jpg
  • Shanghais old flower market off Rejin Lu, in Shanghai, China. This excellent flower market which sells fresh flowers on the ground floor and fake flowers upstairs is situated in an old communist party building. Sellers and arrangers work through the heat and cold in this exposed building, moving flowers at unbelievably low prices compared to this trade in the West.
    2005-07-01 shanghai 2 010.jpg
  • Shanghais old flower market off Rejin Lu, in Shanghai, China. This excellent flower market which sells fresh flowers on the ground floor and fake flowers upstairs is situated in an old communist party building. Sellers and arrangers work through the heat and cold in this exposed building, moving flowers at unbelievably low prices compared to this trade in the West.
    2005-07-01 shanghai 2 003_alamy.jpg
  • Shanghais old flower market off Rejin Lu, in Shanghai, China. This excellent flower market which sells fresh flowers on the ground floor and fake flowers upstairs is situated in an old communist party building. Sellers and arrangers work through the heat and cold in this exposed building, moving flowers at unbelievably low prices compared to this trade in the West.
    2005-07-01 shanghai 2 008_alamy.jpg
  • Flower arranger, Joyce Farrow arranges freshly picked flowers from the garden at Castle Howard stately home, North Yorkshire, UK. Castle Howard is located in the Howardian Hills AONB, a landscape with well-wooded rolling countryside, patchwork of arable and pasture fields, scenic villages and historic country houses with classic parkland landscapes.
    33-09_1_1.jpg
  • A florist arranges a display of flowers in her shop in the Mercato Orientale, Genoa. Opened in 1899 it is the principal market in Genoa selling vegetables, meat and fish.
    SFE_180627_016_1.jpg
  • Flower arranger, Joyce Farrow stands in the walled garden of Castle Howard stately home holding a bunch of sweet peas, North Yorkshire, UK. Castle Howard is located in the Howardian Hills AONB, a landscape with well-wooded rolling countryside, patchwork of arable and pasture fields, scenic villages and historic country houses with classic parkland landscapes.
    34-18_1_1.jpg
  • Eric Nunns, florist preparing a flower arrangement for a wedding taking place at Newby Hall estate and gardens, Ripon, North Yorkshire, UK
    21-06_1.jpg
  • Display of curtains (drapes) in a central London street shop window. Arranged in a neat display across the width of the window are the fabrics of someone's future home, the tastes being traditional and slightly retrospective with the quality reflected in the low prices, seen on labels alongside the material. A building is under construction in the background, across the road with a crane seemingly lifting the tassel that dangles from the store's ceiling.
    curtains_window03-27-03-2015_1.jpg
  • Ice cream cones on sale at a cafe in Old Leigh, on 10th September 2019, in Leigh-on-Sea, Essex, England.
    estuary_walk-05-10-09-2019.jpg
  • An inflated Happy Birthday helium balloon along with bouquets of fresh flowers in the rear of a van making multiple deliveries around the capital, on 5th June 2019, in London, England.
    flowers_van-01-05-06-2019.jpg
  • Locals talk in a quiet place at the weekly market at Qurna, a village on the West Bank of Luxor, Egypt. Holding seemingly serious talks about an important local matter or a business issue, the people sit on the dirt path alongside a rough wall. Amidst the bustle of this busy regular event, people from many miles around have come to trade and buy their provisions.
    egypt22-01-03-2016_1.jpg
  • A man sells fresh oranges from his bicycle in chaotic street in Kathmandu, Nepal. In the heart of the Nepali capital, the busy streets are popular with produce sellers and shoppers as wellas tourists to see the genuine sprawl of Kathmandu, a destination for travellers from around the world. Amid the dark and dirty background, the oranges become a bright addition to this urban landscape. Oranges are grown in places such as Nayagaun Gulmi. Kathmandu is the capital and largest urban agglomerate of Nepal. Its 2011 census shows it has a population of more than 2.5 million inhabitants.
    kathmandu_oranges-24-11-1995_1.jpg
  • A collection of domestic tools stored on the wall of a small farmstead garage. Nailed into a home-made board attached to the wall of this shed, the tools have their own specialplace, marked by drawn shapes of each item allowing easy replacement after use. Hammers, chisels, screw drivers, hacksaws, alan keys and spanners all their own location giving the idea of a well-organised workshop.
    shed_tools02-04-05-2013_1_1.jpg
  • A greeting driver attempts to identify one of his passengers from a group of non-English-speaking young people who have just arrived off a flight from Beijing. In the hectic international arrivals concourse of Heathrow's Terminal 5, the man hold up a name board to attract the attention of those Chinese nationals who are new students at a Bournemouth language college called Education First (EF), based on England's south coast. With the help of a chaperone, the man points to a young girl in the hope she might be on his list. Neither speak each other's mother tongue and the language barrier is difficult to overcome. From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009).
    heathrow_airport424-13-07-2009_1.jpg
  • Greeting drivers await their passengers to arrive off a flight from Beijing. In the hectic international arrivals concourse of Heathrow's Terminal 5, the men hold up name boards to attract the attention of those Chinese nationals who are new students at a Bournemouth language college called Education First (EF), based on England's south coast. From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009).
    heathrow_airport403-13-07-2009_1.jpg
  • From a low angle, we see a greeting driver from Dover Heritage Taxis who awaits his passenger to arrive off a flight from Turkey. In the hectic international arrivals concourse of Heathrow Airport's Terminal 5, the man holds up a name board to attract the attention of the man who is a member of a cruise ship's crew that is due to sail from the sea port of Dover. From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009).
    heathrow_airport105-13-07-2009_1.jpg
  • A young Asian woman suffering from domestic violence stands alone in the bay window of her home.
    06-domestic_3206.jpg
  • Ice cream cones on sale at a cafe in Old Leigh, on 10th September 2019, in Leigh-on-Sea, Essex, England.
    estuary_walk-04-10-09-2019.jpg
  • Fruit and buyers in the narrow streets of the Bairro Alto district - or Upper City - the oldest of Lisbon's residential quarters. A local woman across the narrow, high-sided street, yawns while an orange and apple seller looks for her next customer on the cobbled lane. <br />
Lisbon's Bairro Alto quarter is located above Baixa and developed in the 16th Century. Suffering very little damage in the earthquake of 1755, it remains the area of most character and renowned for its residential and working quarter for craftsmen and shopkeepers. At night, life takes on a different personality when bars and up until the 60s, prostitution gave the district a bad reputation in the past but nowadays tourists and the chic frequent its streets and traditional 'Fado' (classical Portuguese opera) bars.
    lisbon_market02-22-03-1994_1.jpg
  • Flower arrangers hands detail shot, Rome, Italy.
    _DSF1308_1.jpg
  • An elderly woman arranges flowers in her hair in her bedroom, Janakpuri, New Delhi, India
    SFE_090901_123.jpg
  • The Callanish Stones on the west coast of Lewis in the Outer Hebrides, Scotland on 17 July 2018.  The Callanish Stones are an arrangement of standing stones placed in a cruciform pattern with a central stone circle. They were erected in the late Neolithic era, and were a focus for ritual activity during the Bronze Age
    DSCF2408cc_1.jpg
  • A chaotic arrangement of letter boxes on Xin Le Lu, Shanghai, China.
    2005-06-30 shanghai 008_alamy.jpg
  • A women reads her book in her neatly arranged burger van along the A1 on the 10th May in Newcastle in the United Kingdom.
    SM_RoadsideBritain_217.jpg
  • The DMZ Museum on 06th February 2016 in the Goseong County in South Korea. Established as a constant reminder of its painful past, the DMZ Museum embraces everything about the latest efforts made to transform the DMZ from a place of political scars to a symbol of peace and ecology. The museum features exhibition halls arranged under a number of different themes that underscore the historical significance of the DMZ and its value as a treasure trove of ecology for the future. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03928.jpg
  • The DMZ Museum on 06th February 2016 in the Goseong County in South Korea. Established as a constant reminder of its painful past, the DMZ Museum embraces everything about the latest efforts made to transform the DMZ from a place of political scars to a symbol of peace and ecology. The museum features exhibition halls arranged under a number of different themes that underscore the historical significance of the DMZ and its value as a treasure trove of ecology for the future. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03930.jpg
  • The DMZ Museum on 06th February 2016 in the Goseong County in South Korea. Established as a constant reminder of its painful past, the museum embraces everything about the latest efforts made to transform the DMZ Demilitarised Zone from a place of political scars to a symbol of peace and ecology. The museum features exhibition halls arranged under a number of different themes that underscore the historical significance of the DMZ and its value as a treasure trove of ecology for the future. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03921.jpg
  • Korean propaganda on display at the DMZ Museum on 06th February 2016 in the Goseong County in South Korea. Established as a constant reminder of its painful past, the museum embraces everything about the latest efforts made to transform the DMZ Demilitarised Zone from a place of political scars to a symbol of peace and ecology. The museum features exhibition halls arranged under a number of different themes that underscore the historical significance of the DMZ and its value as a treasure trove of ecology for the future. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03922.jpg
  • The Big Three photograph from the 1945 Yalta Conference featuring Winston Churchill, Franklin D. Roosevelt and Joseph Stalin. One of many Korean war photos displayed at the DMZ Museum on 06th February 2016 in the Goseong County in South Korea. Established as a constant reminder of its painful past, the museum embraces everything about the latest efforts made to transform the DMZ from a place of political scars to a symbol of peace and ecology. The museum features exhibition halls arranged under a number of different themes that underscore the historical significance of the DMZ and its value as a treasure trove of ecology for the future. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03909.jpg
  • The DMZ Museum on 06th February 2016 in the Goseong County in South Korea. Established as a constant reminder of its painful past, the museum embraces everything about the latest efforts made to transform the DMZ Demilitarised Zone from a place of political scars to a symbol of peace and ecology. The museum features exhibition halls arranged under a number of different themes that underscore the historical significance of the DMZ and its value as a treasure trove of ecology for the future. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03901.jpg
  • Display loud speakers at the DMZ Museum on 06th February 2016 in the Goseong County in South Korea. Established as a constant reminder of its painful past, the museum embraces everything about the latest efforts made to transform the DMZ Demilitarised Zone from a place of political scars to a symbol of peace and ecology. The museum features exhibition halls arranged under a number of different themes that underscore the historical significance of the DMZ and its value as a treasure trove of ecology for the future. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03897.jpg
  • The DMZ Museum on 06th February 2016 in the Goseong County in South Korea. Established as a constant reminder of its painful past, the museum embraces everything about the latest efforts made to transform the DMZ Demilitarised Zone from a place of political scars to a symbol of peace and ecology. The museum features exhibition halls arranged under a number of different themes that underscore the historical significance of the DMZ and its value as a treasure trove of ecology for the future. The Path to Peace tour was organised by PyeongChang and The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
    PY2018D03-SM-03899.jpg
  • Young girl going home from school on her hoverboard, accompanied by a guardian and her dog. Hackney, London, England, UK. A self-balancing two-wheeled board, or self-balancing electric scooter, also commonly referred to as a hoverboard, is a type of portable, rechargeable battery-powered scooter. They typically consist of two wheels arranged side-by-side, with two small platforms between the wheels, on which the rider stands. The device is controlled by the rider's feet, standing on the built-in gyroscopic, sensored pads.
    20160120_hoverboard girl_C.jpg
  • Young girl going home from school on her hoverboard, accompanied by a guardian and her dog. Hackney, London, England, UK. A self-balancing two-wheeled board, or self-balancing electric scooter, also commonly referred to as a hoverboard, is a type of portable, rechargeable battery-powered scooter. They typically consist of two wheels arranged side-by-side, with two small platforms between the wheels, on which the rider stands. The device is controlled by the rider's feet, standing on the built-in gyroscopic, sensored pads.
    20160120_hoverboard girl_A.jpg
  • Young girl going home from school on her hoverboard, accompanied by a guardian and her dog. Hackney, London, England, UK. A self-balancing two-wheeled board, or self-balancing electric scooter, also commonly referred to as a hoverboard, is a type of portable, rechargeable battery-powered scooter. They typically consist of two wheels arranged side-by-side, with two small platforms between the wheels, on which the rider stands. The device is controlled by the rider's feet, standing on the built-in gyroscopic, sensored pads.
    20160120_hoverboard girl_B.jpg
  • Man commuting on his hoverboard passes other traffic going in the opposite direction. London, England, UK. A self-balancing two-wheeled board, or self-balancing electric scooter, also commonly referred to as a hoverboard, is a type of portable, rechargeable battery-powered scooter. They typically consist of two wheels arranged side-by-side, with two small platforms between the wheels, on which the rider stands. The device is controlled by the rider's feet, standing on the built-in gyroscopic, sensored pads.
    20160120_hoverboard commuter_C.jpg
  • A vendor arranging fruit at Phsar Kandal morning market in Phnom Penh, the capital city of Cambodia. A large variety of local products are available for sale in fresh markets all over Cambodia, all being sold on small individual stalls.
    DSCF6405cc_1_1.jpg
  • A vendor arranging her red chilli peppers at Phsar Kandal morning market in Phnom Penh, the capital city of Cambodia. A large variety of local products are available for sale in fresh markets all over Cambodia, all being sold on small individual stalls.
    DSCF6316cc_1.jpg
  • A vendor arranging her red chilli peppers at Phsar Kandal morning market in Phnom Penh, the capital city of Cambodia. A large variety of local products are available for sale in fresh markets all over Cambodia, all being sold on small individual stalls.
    DSCF6302cc_1_1.jpg
  • A vendor arranging her red chilli peppers at Phsar Kandal morning market in Phnom Penh, the capital city of Cambodia. A large variety of local products are available for sale in fresh markets all over Cambodia, all being sold on small individual stalls.
    DSCF6316cc_1.jpg
  • A vendor arranging her red chilli peppers at Phsar Kandal morning market in Phnom Penh, the capital city of Cambodia. A large variety of local products are available for sale in fresh markets all over Cambodia, all being sold on small individual stalls.
    DSCF6302cc_1.jpg
  • An Asian couple dressed in matching red, outside St. Pancras station, London. In conversation on the phone, he makes arrangements while his girlfriend stands awkwardly, over-dressed for this part of north London. At her feet is some newspaper blowing along the street.
    st_pancras03-04-08-2015_1.jpg
  • The artwork entitled Crossroads of Curiosity by David Normal, outside the British Library, London. Londoners rest on the flat surfaces below scenes, encouraged to scan the murals using cameras on a phone to call up the collage source material on the phone’s screen and then interact with the artist’s interpretations. The official descriiption says of the artwork: "Artist David Normal’s Crossroads of Curiosity is a suite of murals that extends the notion of a “cabinet of curiosity” outward from the rectilinear arrangement of objects in glass cases to encompass the world in a series of dramatic tableaux featuring provocative juxtapositions of vastly different times, places, and peoples."
    crossroads_curiosity02-04-08-2015_1.jpg
  • Vendor arranges dried fish on her stall at Khua Din early morning market in Vientiane city, Lao PDR. A large variety of local products are available for sale in fresh markets all over Laos, all being sold on small individual stalls.
    DSCF0735cc_1.jpg
  • An Asian couple dressed in matching red, outside St. Pancras station, London. In conversation on the phone, he makes arrangements while his girlfriend stands awkwardly, over-dressed for this part of north London. At her feet is some newspaper blowing along the street.
    st_pancras03-04-08-2015_1.jpg
  • The artwork entitled Crossroads of Curiosity by David Normal, outside the British Library, London. Londoners rest on the flat surfaces below scenes, encouraged to scan the murals using cameras on a phone to call up the collage source material on the phone’s screen and then interact with the artist’s interpretations. The official descriiption says of the artwork: "Artist David Normal’s Crossroads of Curiosity is a suite of murals that extends the notion of a “cabinet of curiosity” outward from the rectilinear arrangement of objects in glass cases to encompass the world in a series of dramatic tableaux featuring provocative juxtapositions of vastly different times, places, and peoples."
    crossroads_curiosity02-04-08-2015_1.jpg
  • Workmen from Stewart Signs organise the hanging of a temporary printed media hanging outside a Dior shop being refurbished in central London. The imagery is that of a fantasy garden with models placed around the landscape while construction work carries on in front and behind the screen. Reaching across the width of the picture, we see the employees in hi-visibility clothing, arranging the sheets before they're hoisted up into position on the side of the building. The Dior store occupies a prime location on one of London's most prestigious streets known for fashion and jewellery and work continues behind the screen, hidden to passers-by.
    dior_hoarding29-27-03-2015_1.jpg
  • A Hindu Cham woman makes a ceramic barbeque using a traditional method in the famous pottery village of Bau Truc in Central Vietnam. Cham potters do not use a wheel to make pots, instead clay is pressed into shape using the hands. Layers of clay are added to the original piece and the potter moves around the object, pressing the clay into the desired shape. They are then put directly in the sun and completely bone dried, making them ready to be fired. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    S0313631cc_1.jpg
  • A Hindu Cham woman making ceramic pots using a traditional method in the famous pottery village of Bau Truc in Central Vietnam. Cham potters do not use a wheel to make pots, instead clay is pressed into shape using the hands. Layers of clay are added to the original piece and the potter moves around the object, pressing the clay into the desired shape. They are then put directly in the sun and completely bone dried, making them ready to be fired. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    DSCF3760cc_1.jpg
  • Hindu Cham women making a ceramic pot using a traditional method in the famous pottery village of Bau Truc in Central Vietnam. Cham potters do not use a wheel to make pots, instead clay is pressed into shape using the hands. Layers of clay are added to the original piece and the potter moves around the object, pressing the clay into the desired shape. They are then put directly in the sun and completely bone dried, making them ready to be fired. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    DSCF3750cc_1.jpg
  • A Hindu Cham woman makes a ceramic barbeque using a traditional method in the famous pottery village of Bau Truc in Central Vietnam. Cham potters do not use a wheel to make pots, instead clay is pressed into shape using the hands. Layers of clay are added to the original piece and the potter moves around the object, pressing the clay into the desired shape. They are then put directly in the sun and completely bone dried, making them ready to be fired. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    DSCF3608cc_1.jpg
  • A Hindu Cham woman makes a ceramic pot using a traditional method in the famous pottery village of Bau Truc in Central Vietnam. Cham potters do not use a wheel to make pots, instead clay is pressed into shape using the hands. Layers of clay are added to the original piece and the potter moves around the object, pressing the clay into the desired shape. They are then put directly in the sun and completely bone dried, making them ready to be fired. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    A0027765cc_1.jpg
  • A Hindu Cham woman makes a ceramic pot using a traditional method in the famous pottery village of Bau Truc in Central Vietnam. Cham potters do not use a wheel to make pots, instead clay is pressed into shape using the hands. Layers of clay are added to the original piece and the potter moves around the object, pressing the clay into the desired shape. They are then put directly in the sun and completely bone dried, making them ready to be fired. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    A0027764cc_1.jpg
  • A Hindu Cham woman preparing clay to make a ceramic barbeque using a traditional method in the famous pottery village of Bau Truc in Central Vietnam. Cham potters do not use a wheel to make pots, instead clay is pressed into shape using the hands. Layers of clay are added to the original piece and the potter moves around the object, pressing the clay into the desired shape. They are then put directly in the sun and completely bone dried, making them ready to be fired. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    A0027656cc_1.jpg
  • A Hindu Cham woman making a ceramic barbeque using a traditional method in the famous pottery village of Bau Truc in Central Vietnam. Cham potters do not use a wheel to make pots, instead clay is pressed into shape using the hands. Layers of clay are added to the original piece and the potter moves around the object, pressing the clay into the desired shape. They are then put directly in the sun and completely bone dried, making them ready to be fired. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    A0027649cc_1.jpg
  • Women removing fired ceramic pots and barbeques in Duc Binh, a Hindu Cham village in Binh Thuan province, Central Vietnam. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    A0027452cc_1.jpg
  • A Hindu Cham woman holds a newly-fired ceramic pot made using a traditional method in Duc Binh village in Binh Thuan province, Central Vietnam. Cham potters do not use a wheel to make pots, instead clay is pressed into shape using the hands. Layers of clay are added to the original piece and the potter moves around the object, pressing the clay into the desired shape. They are then put directly in the sun and completely bone dried, making them ready to be fired. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    A0027448cc_1.jpg
  • Firing hand-made ceramic pots and barbeques in Duc Binh, a Hindu Cham village in Binh Thuan province, Central Vietnam. They are then put directly in the sun and completely bone dried, making them ready to be fired. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    A0027425cc_1.jpg
  • The facade of the new Beaumont Hotel in London, UK, has been topped by a large scale crouching figure by British artist Antony Gormley. ‘Room’ is a geometric liveable space formed with stacks of metallic cubes arranged to resemble a giant sitting man. This has been a controversial construction in amongst old architecture in Mayfair.
    20140611_gormley hotel_M.jpg
  • The facade of the new Beaumont Hotel in London, UK, has been topped by a large scale crouching figure by British artist Antony Gormley. ‘Room’ is a geometric liveable space formed with stacks of metallic cubes arranged to resemble a giant sitting man. This has been a controversial construction in amongst old architecture in Mayfair.
    20140611_gormley hotel_L.jpg
  • The facade of the new Beaumont Hotel in London, UK, has been topped by a large scale crouching figure by British artist Antony Gormley. ‘Room’ is a geometric liveable space formed with stacks of metallic cubes arranged to resemble a giant sitting man. This has been a controversial construction in amongst old architecture in Mayfair.
    20140611_gormley hotel_K.jpg
  • The facade of the new Beaumont Hotel in London, UK, has been topped by a large scale crouching figure by British artist Antony Gormley. ‘Room’ is a geometric liveable space formed with stacks of metallic cubes arranged to resemble a giant sitting man. This has been a controversial construction in amongst old architecture in Mayfair.
    20140611_gormley hotel_J.jpg
  • The facade of the new Beaumont Hotel in London, UK, has been topped by a large scale crouching figure by British artist Antony Gormley. ‘Room’ is a geometric liveable space formed with stacks of metallic cubes arranged to resemble a giant sitting man. This has been a controversial construction in amongst old architecture in Mayfair.
    20140611_gormley hotel_I.jpg
  • The facade of the new Beaumont Hotel in London, UK, has been topped by a large scale crouching figure by British artist Antony Gormley. ‘Room’ is a geometric liveable space formed with stacks of metallic cubes arranged to resemble a giant sitting man. This has been a controversial construction in amongst old architecture in Mayfair.
    20140611_gormley hotel_F.jpg
  • The facade of the new Beaumont Hotel in London, UK, has been topped by a large scale crouching figure by British artist Antony Gormley. ‘Room’ is a geometric liveable space formed with stacks of metallic cubes arranged to resemble a giant sitting man. This has been a controversial construction in amongst old architecture in Mayfair.
    20140611_gormley hotel_E.jpg
  • The facade of the new Beaumont Hotel in London, UK, has been topped by a large scale crouching figure by British artist Antony Gormley. ‘Room’ is a geometric liveable space formed with stacks of metallic cubes arranged to resemble a giant sitting man. This has been a controversial construction in amongst old architecture in Mayfair.
    20140611_gormley hotel_B.jpg
  • A male shop keeper arranges the carrots in a fruit and vegetable display within a connivence shop in Wadebridge, North Cornwall, United Kingdom.  The shop works closely with local growers and suppliers to reduce food miles and support the local community.  Wadebridge has a grass roots social enterprise called Wadebridge Renewable Energy Network (WREN) which supports local businesses and aims to become the first renewable energy powered town in the UK.
    UK-Village-Shop-Local-Produce-0126.jpg
  • Inside a classroom at South Farnborough Infant School, Hampshire, UK.  The female teacher is arranging a new classroom display while the young children sit and work at their tables.
    UK-Education-Primary-School-8655.jpg
  • Wigs on bust models seen in the window of a retailer in central London. Reflected in a curved mirror, the mannequins' busts appear as repetitions into the distance along with outside vegetation from an exterior plant arrangement in the street. Various hair styles are seen for women to try on and buy.
    wigs_window02-03-03-2014.jpg
  • Waste bins arranged in the street opposite the City of London's Guildhall. Mostly red and a few blue plastic wheelie bins have been gathered in front of the City of London's Guildhall, used as a town hall for several hundred years, and is still the ceremonial centre of the City of London. Local construction work might mean that materials need to be removed from this site, kept away from passers-by before their removal later on.
    guildhall_bins01-21-02-2014.jpg
  • A detail of the fuel-stained runway deck of the US Navy's Harry S Truman aircraft carrier whilst on exercise somewhere in the Persian Gulf. From this surface, $38 million F/A-18s fighters take off the ship's deck and into the air from a standing position. The angled flight decks of the carriers use a CATOBAR arrangement to operate aircraft, with steam catapults and arrestor wires for launch and recovery. The Truman is the largest and newest of the US Navy's fleet of new generation carriers, a 97,000 ton floating city with a crew of  5,137, 650 are women.
    US_navy_carrier03-10-12-2002_1_1_1.jpg
  • Detail of the catapult that propels F-A/18 fighters from the deck of the US Navy's Harry S Truman aircraft carrier whilst on exercise somewhere in the Persian Gulf. The cable drives $38 million F/A-18s fighters off the ship's deck and into the air from a standing position. The angled flight decks of the carriers use a CATOBAR arrangement to operate aircraft, with steam catapults and arrestor wires for launch and recovery. The Truman is the largest and newest of the US Navy's fleet of new generation carriers, a 97,000 ton floating city with a crew of  5,137, 650 are women.
    US_navy_carrier02-07-01-2003_1_1.jpg
  • Yellow security gate scanners, still in place the day after Margaret Thatcher's ceremonial funeral at St Paul's Cathedral that required tight security, remains as a backdrop for commuting or waiting Londoners. Beneath the reinforced arch, the commuters text and check messages or attend to children in buggies. Before their imminent removal, they made an incongruous sight in the area as people passed their ugly presence. The high-security event brought much of the City of London to a standstill as arrangements for Thatcher's cortege passed nearby to the cathedral where 2,000 VIPs gathered to honour the former British Prime Minister.
    security_gate02-18-04-2013_1_1.jpg
  • Neighbours and friends in Carver Road, Herne Hill south London, celebrate the royal wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton (now called the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge). Across the UK, 5,500 formal road closures (825 in London) were arranged with local authorities and residents held traffic-free events, the like of which haven’t been seen since the ill-fated wedding of Charles and Diana in 1981 – in the traditions of Victorian and end of war eras.
    royal_wedding_party52-29-April-2011.jpg
  • Neighbours and friends in Carver Road, Herne Hill south London, celebrate the royal wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton (now called the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge). Across the UK, 5,500 formal road closures (825 in London) were arranged with local authorities and residents held traffic-free events, the like of which haven’t been seen since the ill-fated wedding of Charles and Diana in 1981 – in the traditions of Victorian and end of war eras.
    royal_wedding_party49-29-April-2011.jpg
  • Neighbours and friends in Carver Road, Herne Hill south London, celebrate the royal wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton (now called the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge). Across the UK, 5,500 formal road closures (825 in London) were arranged with local authorities and residents held traffic-free events, the like of which haven’t been seen since the ill-fated wedding of Charles and Diana in 1981 – in the traditions of Victorian and end of war eras.
    royal_wedding_party48-29-April-2011.jpg
  • Neighbours and friends in Burbage Road, Dulwich south London, celebrate the royal wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton (now called the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge). Across the UK, 5,500 formal road closures (825 in London) were arranged with local authorities and residents held traffic-free events, the like of which haven’t been seen since the ill-fated wedding of Charles and Diana in 1981 – in the traditions of Victorian and end of war eras.
    royal_wedding_party47-29-April-2011.jpg
  • Neighbours and friends in Burbage Road, Dulwich south London, celebrate the royal wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton (now called the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge). Across the UK, 5,500 formal road closures (825 in London) were arranged with local authorities and residents held traffic-free events, the like of which haven’t been seen since the ill-fated wedding of Charles and Diana in 1981 – in the traditions of Victorian and end of war eras.
    royal_wedding_party45-29-April-2011.jpg
  • Neighbours and friends in Burbage Road, Dulwich south London, celebrate the royal wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton (now called the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge). Across the UK, 5,500 formal road closures (825 in London) were arranged with local authorities and residents held traffic-free events, the like of which haven’t been seen since the ill-fated wedding of Charles and Diana in 1981 – in the traditions of Victorian and end of war eras.
    royal_wedding_party44-29-April-2011.jpg
  • Neighbours and friends in Carver Road, Herne Hill south London, celebrate the royal wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton (now called the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge). Across the UK, 5,500 formal road closures (825 in London) were arranged with local authorities and residents held traffic-free events, the like of which haven’t been seen since the ill-fated wedding of Charles and Diana in 1981 – in the traditions of Victorian and end of war eras.
    royal_wedding_party41-29-April-2011.jpg
  • Neighbours and friends in Carver Road, Herne Hill south London, celebrate the royal wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton (now called the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge). Across the UK, 5,500 formal road closures (825 in London) were arranged with local authorities and residents held traffic-free events, the like of which haven’t been seen since the ill-fated wedding of Charles and Diana in 1981 – in the traditions of Victorian and end of war eras.
    royal_wedding_party37-29-April-2011.jpg
  • Neighbours and friends in Carver Road, Herne Hill south London, celebrate the royal wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton (now called the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge). Across the UK, 5,500 formal road closures (825 in London) were arranged with local authorities and residents held traffic-free events, the like of which haven’t been seen since the ill-fated wedding of Charles and Diana in 1981 – in the traditions of Victorian and end of war eras.
    royal_wedding_party36-29-April-2011.jpg
  • Neighbours and friends in Carver Road, Herne Hill south London, celebrate the royal wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton (now called the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge). Across the UK, 5,500 formal road closures (825 in London) were arranged with local authorities and residents held traffic-free events, the like of which haven’t been seen since the ill-fated wedding of Charles and Diana in 1981 – in the traditions of Victorian and end of war eras.
    royal_wedding_party34-29-April-2011.jpg
  • Neighbours and friends in Carver Road, Herne Hill south London, celebrate the royal wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton (now called the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge). Across the UK, 5,500 formal road closures (825 in London) were arranged with local authorities and residents held traffic-free events, the like of which haven’t been seen since the ill-fated wedding of Charles and Diana in 1981 – in the traditions of Victorian and end of war eras.
    royal_wedding_party32-29-April-2011.jpg
  • Neighbours and friends in Carver Road, Herne Hill south London, celebrate the royal wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton (now called the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge). Across the UK, 5,500 formal road closures (825 in London) were arranged with local authorities and residents held traffic-free events, the like of which haven’t been seen since the ill-fated wedding of Charles and Diana in 1981 – in the traditions of Victorian and end of war eras.
    royal_wedding_party30-29-April-2011.jpg
  • Neighbours and friends in Carver Road, Herne Hill south London, celebrate the royal wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton (now called the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge). Across the UK, 5,500 formal road closures (825 in London) were arranged with local authorities and residents held traffic-free events, the like of which haven’t been seen since the ill-fated wedding of Charles and Diana in 1981 – in the traditions of Victorian and end of war eras.
    royal_wedding_party27-29-April-2011.jpg
  • Neighbours and friends in Carver Road, Herne Hill south London, celebrate the royal wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton (now called the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge). Across the UK, 5,500 formal road closures (825 in London) were arranged with local authorities and residents held traffic-free events, the like of which haven’t been seen since the ill-fated wedding of Charles and Diana in 1981 – in the traditions of Victorian and end of war eras.
    royal_wedding_party22-29-April-2011.jpg
  • Neighbours and friends in Carver Road, Herne Hill south London, celebrate the royal wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton (now called the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge). Across the UK, 5,500 formal road closures (825 in London) were arranged with local authorities and residents held traffic-free events, the like of which haven’t been seen since the ill-fated wedding of Charles and Diana in 1981 – in the traditions of Victorian and end of war eras.
    royal_wedding_party18-29-April-2011.jpg
  • Neighbours and friends in Carver Road, Herne Hill south London, celebrate the royal wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton (now called the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge). Across the UK, 5,500 formal road closures (825 in London) were arranged with local authorities and residents held traffic-free events, the like of which haven’t been seen since the ill-fated wedding of Charles and Diana in 1981 – in the traditions of Victorian and end of war eras.
    royal_wedding_party16-29-April-2011.jpg
  • Neighbours and friends in Carver Road, Herne Hill south London, celebrate the royal wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton (now called the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge). Across the UK, 5,500 formal road closures (825 in London) were arranged with local authorities and residents held traffic-free events, the like of which haven’t been seen since the ill-fated wedding of Charles and Diana in 1981 – in the traditions of Victorian and end of war eras.
    royal_wedding_party12-29-April-2011.jpg
  • Neighbours and friends in Desenfans Road, Dulwich south London, celebrate the royal wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton (now called the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge). Across the UK, 5,500 formal road closures (825 in London) were arranged with local authorities and residents held traffic-free events, the like of which haven’t been seen since the ill-fated wedding of Charles and Diana in 1981 – in the traditions of Victorian and end of war eras.
    royal_wedding_party5-29-April-2011.jpg
  • Neighbours and friends in Desenfans Road, Dulwich south London, celebrate the royal wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton (now called the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge). Across the UK, 5,500 formal road closures (825 in London) were arranged with local authorities and residents held traffic-free events, the like of which haven’t been seen since the ill-fated wedding of Charles and Diana in 1981 – in the traditions of Victorian and end of war eras.
    royal_wedding_party3-29-April-2011.jpg
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