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  • A local female farm worker carries bunches of daffodils in a field farmed by commercial bulb grower Walkers Bulbs At Taylors, Holbeach, Spalding, Lincolnshire
    A_8361cc_1.jpg
  • A local female farm worker carries bunches of daffodils in a field farmed by commercial bulb grower Walkers Bulbs At Taylors, Holbeach, Spalding, Lincolnshire
    A_8357cc_1.jpg
  • Bunches of daffodils waiting to be picked up after harvesting in a field farmed by commercial bulb grower Walkers Bulbs At Taylors, Holbeach, Spalding, Lincolnshire
    A_8333cc_1.jpg
  • Rows of daffodils waiting to be picked in a field farmed by commercial bulb grower Walkers Bulbs At Taylors, Holbeach, Spalding, Lincolnshire, UK
    A_8306cc_1.jpg
  • Bunches of daffodils waiting to be picked up after harvesting in a field farmed by commercial bulb grower Walkers Bulbs At Taylors, Holbeach, Spalding, Lincolnshire
    A_8301cc_1.jpg
  • An Eastern European farm worker picking daffodils in a field farmed by commercial bulb grower Walkers Bulbs At Taylors, Holbeach, Spalding, Lincolnshire
    A_8255cc_1.jpg
  • An Eastern European farm worker picking up bunches of daffodils in a field farmed by commercial bulb grower Walkers Bulbs At Taylors, Holbeach, Spalding, Lincolnshire
    A_8235cc_1.jpg
  • Packing bunches of daffodils into crates after harvesting in a field farmed by commercial bulb grower Walkers Bulbs At Taylors, Holbeach, Spalding, Lincolnshire, UK
    A_8234cc_1.jpg
  • An Eastern European farm worker holding bunches of daffodils picked in a field farmed by commercial bulb grower Walkers Bulbs At Taylors, Holbeach, Spalding, Lincolnshire
    A_8230cc_1.jpg
  • An Eastern European farm worker picking daffodils in a field farmed by commercial bulb grower Walkers Bulbs At Taylors, Holbeach, Spalding, Lincolnshire
    A_8319cc_1.jpg
  • A team of Eastern European farm workers picking daffodils in a field farmed by commercial bulb grower Walkers Bulbs At Taylors, Holbeach, Spalding, Lincolnshire
    A_8322cc_1.jpg
  • A team of Eastern European farm workers picking daffodils in a field farmed by commercial bulb grower Walkers Bulbs At Taylors, Holbeach, Spalding, Lincolnshire
    A_8321cc_1.jpg
  • Bunches of daffodils in crates after harvesting in a field farmed by commercial bulb grower Walkers Bulbs At Taylors, Holbeach, Spalding, Lincolnshire
    A_8314cc_1.jpg
  • Tulip bulbs ready for planting in the garden at Tyntesfield on 21st July 2016 in North Somerset, United Kingdom.
    DSCF9702_1.jpg
  • A hand of an Eastern European farm worker holding bunch of daffodils at the commercial flower grower, Walkers Bulbs At Taylors farm, Holbeach, Spalding, Lincolnshire, UK
    A_8305cc_1.jpg
  • Bulbs wired to a generator indicate power to individual homes on this rudimentary housing estate on a mountain in north Kabul.
    afghan16_646_1.jpg
  • Coloured bulbs on an old sign in the Neon Boneyard which features more than 150 signs. For many years, the Young Electric Sign Company stored many of these old signs in their "boneyard." The signs were slowly being destroyed by exposure to the elements. Private donations and loans have expanded the collection to the current size.
    _F3A1332_1.jpg
  • Freshly harvested garlic drying in the greenhouse on 21st July 2016 in North Somerset, United Kingdom.
    DSCF9700_1.jpg
  • Routine maintenance at the automated Coquet Lighthouse, Northumberland, UK. Coquet Island is a small low tract of green pastureland lying close inshore off the Northumberland coast. The new automated revolving car-headlight arrays are kept lit 24 hours a day. Coquet Lighthouse was automated in 1990 and all Trinity House lighthouses have been automated since November 1998.
    81-16_1.jpg
  • Lettering from the Neon Boneyard in Las Vegas. The Boneyard features more than 150 signs. For many years, the Young Electric Sign Company stored many of these old signs in their "boneyard." The signs were slowly being destroyed by exposure to the elements.
    _F3A1231_1.jpg
  • As blue dawn light becomes another wintry day in south London, the glow of a car's brake lights shines through a covering of fresh snow. The driver has only swept the vehicle's back window with a rear wiper but with her foot on the brake pedal, she is about to set off on a drive to work this morning on roads that have controversially, not been gritted or salted by council highway workers. The surface is therefore still snowy in this residential area of Herne Hill, SE24, London and is a treacherous surface on which to maintain wheel and tyre (tire) traction and many accidents will result, including the heavy lorry (truck) which is about to climb this hill and which will soon prevent him from going much further.
    london_snows05-13-01-2010.jpg
  • Two different types of Energy-saving light bulbs or compact fluorescent lamps in a row on a shelf - 11 watts is equivalent to a 60 watt incandescent bulb and 14 watts and is equivalent to a 75 watt. These light bulbs are a form of fluorescent lighting, which produces less heat than incandescent (filament) bulbs; therefore more of the electrical energy is converted to light, making them more efficient.
    08-bulbs_0941.jpg
  • Two different types of Energy-saving light bulbs or compact fluorescent lamps in a row on a shelf - 11 watts is equivalent to a 60 watt incandescent bulb and 14 watts and is equivalent to a 75 watt. These light bulbs are a form of fluorescent lighting, which produces less heat than incandescent (filament) bulbs; therefore more of the electrical energy is converted to light, making them more efficient.
    08-dup-crop_0939.jpg
  • LED light bulb made by Philips. Wales, UK.  LED lightbulbs consume less energy than incandescent bulbs and need to be replaced less often. With this customers can save money, and also reduce their impact on the environment.
    12-LED_Lightbulb-7154_1.jpg
  • A woman carrying two fennel bulbs at Edinburgh Farmers Market, Scotland
    68-12_1_1.jpg
  • An out of focus post with a light bulb attached, shines in the bright daylight with the Atlantic Ocean beyond. Cocoa beach is on Florida's so-called Space Coast, a resort of beaches, clubs, seafood restaurants and motels that came to life during the 1960s due to America's space program. NASA's John F. Kennedy Space Center is located approximately 15 miles away. The Atlantic Ocean is flat calm in settled weather and the horizon is clear and well-defined with a ship just visible on the right side. Focus is on the sea rather than the post and the light bulb which look like a surreal addition to the landscape. Cocoa Beach served as a playground for many of the astronauts and NASA space industry workers and contractors during the heyday of the space race. After manned space flights, the town held astronaut parades. Before there was a "Silicon Valley," Cocoa Beach and other surrounding towns were full of the best and brightest technical minds around.
    RB-0011.jpg
  • The Principal Keeper at Bishop Rock lighthouse touches the bulb in the lamp room, Cornwall, UK. Bishop Rock Lighthouse stands on a rock ledge 4 miles west of the Scilly Isles. It was converted to automatic operation during 1991 with the last keepers leaving the lighthouse on 21 December 1992. All Trinity House lighthouses have been automated since November 1998.
    18-15_1.jpg
  • A man carrying a lighting fixture attached to his hand, crosses the road, on 22nd November 2017, in London England.
    bulb_man-02-22-11-2017.jpg
  • Workers make fluorescent light bulbs on an assembly line at a Technical Consumer Products, Inc (TCP) factory in Zhengjiang, China, on 30 August, 2010. TCP is one of the major exporters of fluorescent bulbs to the United States, which has made the bulbs the standard light source in the country.
    QS100830Zhengjiang010.jpg
  • Workers make fluorescent light bulbs on an assembly line at a Technical Consumer Products, Inc (TCP) factory in Zhengjiang, China, on 30 August, 2010. TCP is one of the major exporters of fluorescent bulbs to the United States, which has made the bulbs the standard light source in the country.
    QS100830Zhengjiang009.jpg
  • Workers make fluorescent light bulbs on an assembly line at a Technical Consumer Products, Inc (TCP) factory in Zhengjiang, China, on 30 August, 2010. TCP is one of the major exporters of fluorescent bulbs to the United States, which has made the bulbs the standard light source in the country.
    QS100830Zhengjiang006.jpg
  • Workers make fluorescent light bulbs on an assembly line at a Technical Consumer Products, Inc (TCP) factory in Zhengjiang, China, on 30 August, 2010. TCP is one of the major exporters of fluorescent bulbs to the United States, which has made the bulbs the standard light source in the country.
    QS100830Zhengjiang020.jpg
  • Workers make fluorescent light bulbs on an assembly line at a Technical Consumer Products, Inc (TCP) factory in Zhengjiang, China, on 30 August, 2010. TCP is one of the major exporters of fluorescent bulbs to the United States, which has made the bulbs the standard light source in the country.
    QS100830Zhengjiang004.jpg
  • Workers make fluorescent light bulbs on an assembly line at a Technical Consumer Products, Inc (TCP) factory in Zhengjiang, China, on 30 August, 2010. TCP is one of the major exporters of fluorescent bulbs to the United States, which has made the bulbs the standard light source in the country.
    QS100830Zhengjiang002.jpg
  • Some of 250,000 tulips in full bloom in a Lincolnshire flower field farmed by Multiflora Flowers on 9th April 2020 in Holbeach, Lincolnshire, United Kingdom. It is said that ‘If you see a colourful field of flowers, the crop has failed.’ Because of the UK lockdown due to the Covid-19 pandemic wholesalers have closed their doors and supermarkets who are their main customer cancelled their orders leaving the growers with nowhere to sell their flowers. In subsequent days the grower will remove the waste tulip heads in order for the bulbs to retain energy to grow for next year. The Bulgarian workforce arrived in the UK one week before the current travel restrictions and are in lockdown at the farm and are currently cropping for a limited number of orders for any remaining tulips from supermarkets have started to trickle in.
    DSCF6199c.jpg
  • Some of 250,000 deadheaded tulips in a Lincolnshire flower field farmed by Multiflora Flowers on 27th April 2020 in Holbeach, Lincolnshire, United Kingdom. It is said that ‘If you see a colourful field of flowers, the crop has failed.’ Because of the UK lockdown due to the Covid-19 pandemic wholesalers have closed their doors and supermarkets who are their main customer cancelled their orders leaving the growers with nowhere to sell their flowers. The grower removed the waste tulip heads in order for the bulbs to retain energy to grow for next year.
    DSCF6339c.jpg
  • Some of 250,000 tulips in full bloom in a Lincolnshire flower field farmed by Multiflora Flowers on 9th April 2020 in Holbeach, Lincolnshire, United Kingdom. It is said that ‘If you see a colourful field of flowers, the crop has failed.’ Because of the UK lockdown due to the Covid-19 pandemic wholesalers have closed their doors and supermarkets who are their main customer cancelled their orders leaving the growers with nowhere to sell their flowers. In subsequent days the grower will remove the waste tulip heads in order for the bulbs to retain energy to grow for next year.
    DSCF6090c.jpg
  • Some of 250,000 tulips in full bloom in a Lincolnshire flower field farmed by Multiflora Flowers on 9th April 2020 in Holbeach, Lincolnshire, United Kingdom. It is said that ‘If you see a colourful field of flowers, the crop has failed.’ Because of the UK lockdown due to the Covid-19 pandemic wholesalers have closed their doors and supermarkets who are their main customer cancelled their orders leaving the growers with nowhere to sell their flowers. In subsequent days the grower will remove the waste tulip heads in order for the bulbs to retain energy to grow for next year.
    DSCF6116c.jpg
  • Some of 250,000 tulips in full bloom in a Lincolnshire flower field farmed by Multiflora Flowers on 9th April 2020 in Holbeach, Lincolnshire, United Kingdom. It is said that ‘If you see a colourful field of flowers, the crop has failed.’ Because of the UK lockdown due to the Covid-19 pandemic wholesalers have closed their doors and supermarkets who are their main customer cancelled their orders leaving the growers with nowhere to sell their flowers. In subsequent days the grower will remove the waste tulip heads in order for the bulbs to retain energy to grow for next year.
    DJI_0582c.jpg
  • An aerial view of some of the 250,000 tulips in full bloom in a Lincolnshire flower field farmed by Multiflora Flowers on 9th April 2020 in Holbeach, Lincolnshire, United Kingdom. It is said that ‘If you see a colourful field of flowers, the crop has failed.’ Because of the UK lockdown due to the Covid-19 pandemic wholesalers have closed their doors and supermarkets who are their main customer cancelled their orders leaving the growers with nowhere to sell their flowers. In subsequent days the grower will remove the waste tulip heads in order for the bulbs to retain energy to grow for next year.
    DJI_0561c.jpg
  • An aerial view of some of the 250,000 tulips in full bloom in a Lincolnshire flower field farmed by Multiflora Flowers on 9th April 2020 in Holbeach, Lincolnshire, United Kingdom. It is said that ‘If you see a colourful field of flowers, the crop has failed.’ Because of the UK lockdown due to the Covid-19 pandemic wholesalers have closed their doors and supermarkets who are their main customer cancelled their orders leaving the growers with nowhere to sell their flowers. In subsequent days the grower will remove the waste tulip heads in order for the bulbs to retain energy to grow for next year.
    DJI_0578c.jpg
  • From a low angle looking upwards to the building exterior of the Hotel Negresco on the Promenade de Anglais, Nice. We see the colourful orange light bulbs and the overall green hue from sodium illumination and the blue of the evening sky. In the foreground is an example of the ubiquitous palm trees that line the Côte d'Azur. The Hotel Negresco on the Promenade des Anglais on the Baie des Anges in Nice, France was named for Henri Negresco (1868-1920) who had the palatial hotel constructed in 1912. Noted for its doormen dressed in the manner of the staff in 18th-century elite bourgeois households, complete with red-plumed postilion hats, the hotel also offers renowned gourmet dining at Le Chantecler. In 2003 the Hotel Negresco was listed by the government of France as a National Historic Building. Nice is a major tourist centre and a leading resort on the French Riviera. Located in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur région, it is a commune and the préfecture (administrative capital) of the Alpes-Maritimes département.
    RB-0078.jpg
  • Some of 250,000 deadheaded tulips in a Lincolnshire flower field farmed by Multiflora Flowers on 27th April 2020 in Holbeach, Lincolnshire, United Kingdom. It is said that ‘If you see a colourful field of flowers, the crop has failed.’ Because of the UK lockdown due to the Covid-19 pandemic wholesalers have closed their doors and supermarkets who are their main customer cancelled their orders leaving the growers with nowhere to sell their flowers. The grower removed the waste tulip heads in order for the bulbs to retain energy to grow for next year.
    DSCF6283c.jpg
  • Bulgarian workers carrying freshly cropped tulips in a Lincolnshire flower field farmed by Multiflora Flowers on 9th April 2020 in Holbeach, Lincolnshire, United Kingdom. It is said that ‘If you see a colourful field of flowers, the crop has failed.’ Because of the UK lockdown due to the Covid-19 pandemic wholesalers have closed their doors and supermarkets who are their main customer cancelled their orders leaving the growers with nowhere to sell their flowers. In subsequent days the grower will remove the waste tulip heads in order for the bulbs to retain energy to grow for next year. The Bulgarian workforce arrived in the UK one week before the current travel restrictions and are in lockdown at the farm and are currently cropping for a limited number of orders for any remaining tulips from supermarkets have started to trickle in.
    DSCF6168c.jpg
  • Some of 250,000 tulips in full bloom in a Lincolnshire flower field farmed by Multiflora Flowers on 9th April 2020 in Holbeach, Lincolnshire, United Kingdom. It is said that ‘If you see a colourful field of flowers, the crop has failed.’ Because of the UK lockdown due to the Covid-19 pandemic wholesalers have closed their doors and supermarkets who are their main customer cancelled their orders leaving the growers with nowhere to sell their flowers. In subsequent days the grower will remove the waste tulip heads in order for the bulbs to retain energy to grow for next year.
    DSCF6158c.jpg
  • Some of 250,000 deadheaded tulips in a Lincolnshire flower field farmed by Multiflora Flowers on 27th April 2020 in Holbeach, Lincolnshire, United Kingdom. It is said that ‘If you see a colourful field of flowers, the crop has failed.’ Because of the UK lockdown due to the Covid-19 pandemic wholesalers have closed their doors and supermarkets who are their main customer cancelled their orders leaving the growers with nowhere to sell their flowers. The grower removed the waste tulip heads in order for the bulbs to retain energy to grow for next year.
    DJI_0609c.jpg
  • Some of 250,000 deadheaded tulips in a Lincolnshire flower field farmed by Multiflora Flowers on 27th April 2020 in Holbeach, Lincolnshire, United Kingdom. It is said that ‘If you see a colourful field of flowers, the crop has failed.’ Because of the UK lockdown due to the Covid-19 pandemic wholesalers have closed their doors and supermarkets who are their main customer cancelled their orders leaving the growers with nowhere to sell their flowers. The grower removed the waste tulip heads in order for the bulbs to retain energy to grow for next year.
    DJI_0614c.jpg
  • Some of 250,000 deadheaded tulips in a Lincolnshire flower field farmed by Multiflora Flowers on 27th April 2020 in Holbeach, Lincolnshire, United Kingdom. It is said that ‘If you see a colourful field of flowers, the crop has failed.’ Because of the UK lockdown due to the Covid-19 pandemic wholesalers have closed their doors and supermarkets who are their main customer cancelled their orders leaving the growers with nowhere to sell their flowers. The grower removed the waste tulip heads in order for the bulbs to retain energy to grow for next year.
    DJI_0610c.jpg
  • An aerial view of daffodils in full bloom in a Lincolnshire flower field on 9th April 2020 in Cowbit, Lincolnshire, United Kingdom. In a usual year daffodils are grown for bulbs and cropped if there is a market available.  Because of the UK lockdown due to the Covid-19 pandemic wholesalers have closed their doors leaving the growers with nowhere to sell their flowers so there are many more flowers blooming than a normal year.
    DJI_0595c.jpg
  • Some of 250,000 deadheaded tulips in a Lincolnshire flower field farmed by Multiflora Flowers on 27th April 2020 in Holbeach, Lincolnshire, United Kingdom. It is said that ‘If you see a colourful field of flowers, the crop has failed.’ Because of the UK lockdown due to the Covid-19 pandemic wholesalers have closed their doors and supermarkets who are their main customer cancelled their orders leaving the growers with nowhere to sell their flowers. The grower removed the waste tulip heads in order for the bulbs to retain energy to grow for next year.
    DJI_0604c.jpg
  • Some of 250,000 tulips in full bloom in a Lincolnshire flower field farmed by Multiflora Flowers on 9th April 2020 in Holbeach, Lincolnshire, United Kingdom. It is said that ‘If you see a colourful field of flowers, the crop has failed.’ Because of the UK lockdown due to the Covid-19 pandemic wholesalers have closed their doors and supermarkets who are their main customer cancelled their orders leaving the growers with nowhere to sell their flowers. In subsequent days the grower will remove the waste tulip heads in order for the bulbs to retain energy to grow for next year.
    DJI_0570c.jpg
  • An aerial view of some of 250,000 tulips in full bloom in a Lincolnshire flower field farmed by Multiflora Flowers on 9th April 2020 in Holbeach, Lincolnshire, United Kingdom. It is said that ‘If you see a colourful field of flowers, the crop has failed.’ Because of the UK lockdown due to the Covid-19 pandemic wholesalers have closed their doors and supermarkets who are their main customer cancelled their orders leaving the growers with nowhere to sell their flowers. In subsequent days the grower will remove the waste tulip heads in order for the bulbs to retain energy to grow for next year. The Bulgarian workforce arrived in the UK one week before the current travel restrictions and are in lockdown at the farm and are currently cropping for a limited number of orders for any remaining tulips from supermarkets have started to trickle in.
    DJI_0555c.jpg
  • Some of 250,000 deadheaded tulips in a Lincolnshire flower field farmed by Multiflora Flowers on 27th April 2020 in Holbeach, Lincolnshire, United Kingdom. It is said that ‘If you see a colourful field of flowers, the crop has failed.’ Because of the UK lockdown due to the Covid-19 pandemic wholesalers have closed their doors and supermarkets who are their main customer cancelled their orders leaving the growers with nowhere to sell their flowers. The grower removed the waste tulip heads in order for the bulbs to retain energy to grow for next year.
    DSCF6349c.jpg
  • Some of 250,000 deadheaded tulips in a Lincolnshire flower field farmed by Multiflora Flowers on 27th April 2020 in Holbeach, Lincolnshire, United Kingdom. It is said that ‘If you see a colourful field of flowers, the crop has failed.’ Because of the UK lockdown due to the Covid-19 pandemic wholesalers have closed their doors and supermarkets who are their main customer cancelled their orders leaving the growers with nowhere to sell their flowers. The grower removed the waste tulip heads in order for the bulbs to retain energy to grow for next year.
    DJI_0620c.jpg
  • The bulbous bulb of CMA CGM SAs Benjamin Franklin container ship seen in the water as it sails off the coast of southern China, on Sunday, Jan. 31, 2016. The Benjamin Franklin is the largest container ship ever to have docked at a U.S. port.
    QilaiShen_00398.jpg
  • A Muslim community Imam prays at the bedside of a patient who is staying on the Phyllis Friend surgical ward, Royal London Hospital, Whitechapel, London. They both hold out their hands in prayer and the patient puts them to his face. It is daylight behind the bed but the two men are lit by artificial light from a bulb. The Royal London is one of London's oldest, having been founded in 1740 and is a major teaching hospital in Whitechapel, East London. It is part of the Barts and the London NHS Trust, alongside St Bartholomew's Hospital ("Barts"), which is a couple of miles away. Because of the cultural profile of East London, patients tend to be from many faiths, speaking many languages.
    RB-0012.jpg
  • A housewife smiles from her low door in her inner-city home within Lisbon's Bica district of the Portuguese capital. In the shadows a person irons clothes with the help of an electric light bulb. But by her green door in afternoon sunshine, the lady in the foreground looks happy with her lifestyle, darning some material with a good view of passers-by at street level.
    lisbon_wife-21-03-1994.jpg
  • The last light of day fades on the still waters of Sgeir Nam Biast, a bay overlooking Waternish Headland, near Dunvegan, north-west Isle of Skye, Scottish Highlands. A solitary light bulb glows from an upstairs room in this isolated cottage across the calm lake. The weather is perfect but unusual for one of the wildest parts of Britain. Farming practices have changed irreversably in a generation and many residents have English accents rather than that of native Scots islanders as city dwellers from the far south seek an alternative to urban lifestyles. The weather can have adverse effects on those unprepared for such wild conditions, especially during harsh winters when violent storms batter these Atlantic coasts. But old crofts have been converted to bed and breakfast homes, catering for tourist visitors who adore this form of idyllic escapism.<br />
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    9999-RPB59-loch_bay_house07-28-09-20...jpg
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