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  • City of London (corporation) anti-butts litter campaign with burn holes from stubbed out cigarettes. The campaign encourages smokers to bin their butts and help clean up London's Square Mile. The City of London Corporation, in partnership with Keep Britain Tidy, launched the initiative aimed at reducing the number of cigarette butts littering the City’s streets. ‘It’s no small problem…’ is designed to illustrate to smokers that, although each cigarette butt is small, in total more than SIX MILLION BUTTS are dropped each year the City contributing significantly to the £3.8million bill to clean its streets every year.
    smoking_campaign03-17-10-2014_1.jpg
  • City of London (corporation) anti-butts litter campaign with burn holes from stubbed out cigarettes. The campaign encourages smokers to bin their butts and help clean up London's Square Mile. The City of London Corporation, in partnership with Keep Britain Tidy, launched the initiative aimed at reducing the number of cigarette butts littering the City’s streets. ‘It’s no small problem…’ is designed to illustrate to smokers that, although each cigarette butt is small, in total more than SIX MILLION BUTTS are dropped each year the City contributing significantly to the £3.8million bill to clean its streets every year.
    smoking_campaign02-17-10-2014_1.jpg
  • Overflowing ashtray or cigarette butts in a bar in London, UK. Smoking remains the top health concern in the UK.
    20140115_cigarette buts_A.jpg
  • Overflowing ashtray or cigarette butts in a bar in London, UK. Smoking remains the top health concern in the UK.
    20140115_cigarette buts_B.jpg
  • A bucket (pale) of smokers' cigarette butts have been extinguished in a London back street alleyway. Stubbed out in sand to prevent them reigniting for safety reasons, the fags (English slang for cigarettes) echo the steel pegs on the ground. A single packet is also in the bucket at the rear entrance of a London restaurant. Catering staff takes a break from long hours working inside and smoke. The UK government say each year smoking causes 80,000 deaths, costing the National Health Service (NHS) £2.7bn. Just 22% of Britons are smokers - down from 27% at the end of the 1990s - and two-thirds say they would like to give up.
    cigarette_butts01-14-03-2011_1.jpg
  • A pile of cigarette butts. The most common method of smoking today is through cigarettes. It has been suggested that smoking-related disease kills one half of all long term smokers but these diseases may also be contracted by non-smokers. A 2007 report states that about 4.9 million people worldwide each year die as a result of smoking.
    20130506cigarette buttsB.jpg
  • A pile of cigarette butts. The most common method of smoking today is through cigarettes. It has been suggested that smoking-related disease kills one half of all long term smokers but these diseases may also be contracted by non-smokers. A 2007 report states that about 4.9 million people worldwide each year die as a result of smoking.
    20130506cigarette buttsA.jpg
  • Cigarette butts on top of a bin which acts as a huge ashtray in Birmingham, United Kingdom.
    20170518_cigarettes birmingham_002.jpg
  • Cigarette butts on top of a bin which acts as a huge ashtray in Birmingham, United Kingdom.
    20170518_cigarettes birmingham_001.jpg
  • Cigarette butts on top of a bin which acts as an ashtray in London, England, United Kingdom. Smoking is in decline in the UK due to health concerns.
    20180418_stubbed out cigs_001.jpg
  • A detail of a leaning tree stump with its watering hose and dropped cigarette butts in a south London street, on 6th October 2016, in London, England.
    tree_angles-01-06-10-2016.jpg
  • Pair of abandoned platform style trainers, discarded in a doorway strewn with cigarette butts. Tells a story of a night out which went slightly wrong. London, UK.
    20151024_platform trainers_A.jpg
  • Still in the era of being able to smoke inside public places, an elderly gentleman extinguishes his match by waving it in the air to blow out the flame, exhaling and listening to a fellow-drinker in a Newport pub in south Wales. Clouds of smoke can be seen as they waft against the back light that filters through the windows of this smoky bar in the town centre. Pints of bitter are on the table in front of them and ash trays with used butts. The scene is of an industrial town’s pub for working men where language is sharp and there is talk of realities of hard lives.
    pub_smokers-25-01-1986.jpg
  • Discarded cigarettes spill from a hole in a brick wall in Waterloo, south London. We see a detail view of the butt that have been left in the gap of this Victorian wall opposite a bus station. Travellers leave their cigarette ends where others have too.
    cigarettes_wall01-15-05-2015.jpg
  • A collection of smoked cigarette ends on a public ash tray outside the British Library, London, United Kingdom.   A smoking ban in England, making it illegal to smoke in all enclosed public places in England, came into force on 1 July 2007 as a consequence of the Health Act 2006.
    UK-Health-Cigarette-Butts-1486_1.jpg
  • Designated smoking area sign and ash tray. Outside an office building.  London. UK.
    UK-Health-Smoking-7947_1.jpg
  • Using a peat cutter, gamekeeper Don Herd turfs the shooting butts where the 'guns' stand on a grouse shooting day, Upper Nidderdale, North Yorkshire, UK
    Nidd 70-12_1.jpg
  • Gamekeepers Niel Pearson and Don Herd lift turf from the moor to turf shooting butts for the Middlesmoor grouse shoot, Upper Nidderdale, North Yorkshire, UK
    Nidd 67-16_1.jpg
  • Gamekeeper Niel Pearson takes a rest from lifting turf from the moor for turfing shooting butts for the Middlesmoor grouse shoot, Upper Nidderdale, North Yorkshire, UK
    Nidd 67-15_1.jpg
  • Using a peat cutter, gamekeeper Don Herd turfs the shooting butts where the 'guns' stand on a grouse shooting day, Upper Nidderdale, North Yorkshire, UK
    Nidd 70-13_1.jpg
  • A 'gun' grouse shooting in Nidderdale, North Yorkshire, UK. Driven grouse shooting is a field sport of the UK, popular because it provides a challenge due to the rapid flight of the grouse. The grouse shooting season extends from 12 August, often called the "Glorious Twelfth", to 10 December each year. The name 'driven grouse shooting' refers to the way in which the grouse are driven towards the hunters (termed 'guns') by beaters. A shooting party usually includes 8-10 guns who stand in a line in the butts - hides for shooting spaced some 20-30 m apart, screened by a turf or stone wall and usually sunken into the ground to minimise their profile - to shoot the grouse in flight.
    Nidd 115-11_1.jpg
  • Sign for Butt Hutt, barbecue resturant on 28th February 2020 in Natchez, Mississippi, United States.
    _E6A6515.jpg
  • A gamekeeper dragging a turf removed from the moor to make a new grouse shooting butt, Bransdale, North York Moors, North Yorkshire, UK
    19-08_1.jpg
  • A gamekeeper moving a turf removed from the moor by a small digger to make a grouse shooting butt, Bransdale, North York Moors, North Yorkshire, UK
    17-05_1.jpg
  • A 'gun' and his loader waiting in a shooting butt on a grouse shoot, Bransdale Moor, North York Moors, North Yorkshire, UK
    40-02_1.jpg
  • Two gamekeepers turfing a new grouse shooting butt on Bransdale Moor, North York Moors, North Yorkshire, UK
    17-04_1.jpg
  • Landscape around Soda Butte Creek with Mount Norris. On the Beartoot Scenic Highway, Wyoming.
    2007_08_02_Beartooth to Cody_C.jpg
  • Landscape around Soda Butte Creek with Mount Norris. On the Beartoot Scenic Highway, Wyoming.
    2007_08_02_Beartooth to Cody_A.jpg
  • Visitors climb and descend the 225 steps, 43 metre high Waterloo Lions battlefield Mound, on 25th March 2017, at Waterloo, Belgium. The Lions Mound Butte du Lion is a large conical artificial hill completed in 1826. It commemorates the location on the battlefield of Waterloo where a musket ball hit the shoulder of William II of the Netherlands the Prince of Orange and knocked him from his horse during the battle. From the summit, the hill offers a 360 degree vista of the battlefield. The Battle of Waterloo was fought 18 June 1815. A French army under Napoleon Bonaparte was defeated by two of the armies of the Seventh Coalition: an Anglo-led Allied army under the command of the Duke of Wellington, and a Prussian army under the command of Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher, resulting in 41,000 casualties.
    waterloo_battlefield-26-25-03-2017.jpg
  • Visitors climb and descend the steep gradient of 225 steps, 43 metre high Waterloo Lions battlefield Mound, on 25th March 2017, at Waterloo, Belgium. The Lions Mound Butte du Lion is a large conical artificial hill completed in 1826. It commemorates the location on the battlefield of Waterloo where a musket ball hit the shoulder of William II of the Netherlands the Prince of Orange and knocked him from his horse during the battle. From the summit, the hill offers a 360 degree vista of the battlefield. The Battle of Waterloo was fought 18 June 1815. A French army under Napoleon Bonaparte was defeated by two of the armies of the Seventh Coalition: an Anglo-led Allied army under the command of the Duke of Wellington, and a Prussian army under the command of Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher, resulting in 41,000 casualties.
    waterloo_battlefield-25-25-03-2017.jpg
  • Visitors on the top of  the 43 metre high Waterloo Lions battlefield Mound, on 25th March 2017, at Waterloo, Belgium. The Lions Mound Butte du Lion is a large conical artificial hill completed in 1826. It commemorates the location on the battlefield of Waterloo where a musket ball hit the shoulder of William II of the Netherlands the Prince of Orange and knocked him from his horse during the battle. From the summit, the hill offers a 360 degree vista of the battlefield. The Battle of Waterloo was fought 18 June 1815. A French army under Napoleon Bonaparte was defeated by two of the armies of the Seventh Coalition: an Anglo-led Allied army under the command of the Duke of Wellington, and a Prussian army under the command of Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher, resulting in 41,000 casualties.
    waterloo_battlefield-28-25-03-2017.jpg
  • Visitors on the top of  the 43 metre high Waterloo Lions battlefield Mound, on 25th March 2017, at Waterloo, Belgium. The Lions Mound Butte du Lion is a large conical artificial hill completed in 1826. It commemorates the location on the battlefield of Waterloo where a musket ball hit the shoulder of William II of the Netherlands the Prince of Orange and knocked him from his horse during the battle. From the summit, the hill offers a 360 degree vista of the battlefield. The Battle of Waterloo was fought 18 June 1815. A French army under Napoleon Bonaparte was defeated by two of the armies of the Seventh Coalition: an Anglo-led Allied army under the command of the Duke of Wellington, and a Prussian army under the command of Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher, resulting in 41,000 casualties.
    waterloo_battlefield-02-25-03-2017.jpg
  • Detail of a burned-out cigarette and steak medallions and chips in the Slovenian capital, Ljubljana, on 28th June 2018, in Ljubljana, Slovenia.
    slovenia-552-28-06-2018.jpg
  • A bit of innocent batty dancing at Notting Hill Carnival in West London. The Notting Hill Carnival is an annual event which since 1964 has taken place each August, over two days (the August bank holiday Monday and the day beforehand). It is led by members of the West Indian / Caribbrean community, particularly the Trinidadian and Tobagonian British population, many of whom have lived in the area since the 1950s. The carnival has attracted up to 2 million people in the past, making it the second largest street festival in the world. The celebration centres around a parade of floats, dancers and sound systems.
    20110828notting hill carnivalDF.jpg
  • A bit of innocent batty dancing at Notting Hill Carnival in West London. The Notting Hill Carnival is an annual event which since 1964 has taken place each August, over two days (the August bank holiday Monday and the day beforehand). It is led by members of the West Indian / Caribbrean community, particularly the Trinidadian and Tobagonian British population, many of whom have lived in the area since the 1950s. The carnival has attracted up to 2 million people in the past, making it the second largest street festival in the world. The celebration centres around a parade of floats, dancers and sound systems.
    20110828notting hill carnivalDH.jpg
  • A bit of innocent batty dancing at Notting Hill Carnival in West London. The Notting Hill Carnival is an annual event which since 1964 has taken place each August, over two days (the August bank holiday Monday and the day beforehand). It is led by members of the West Indian / Caribbrean community, particularly the Trinidadian and Tobagonian British population, many of whom have lived in the area since the 1950s. The carnival has attracted up to 2 million people in the past, making it the second largest street festival in the world. The celebration centres around a parade of floats, dancers and sound systems.
    20110828notting hill carnivalDG.jpg
  • A bit of innocent batty dancing at Notting Hill Carnival in West London. The Notting Hill Carnival is an annual event which since 1964 has taken place each August, over two days (the August bank holiday Monday and the day beforehand). It is led by members of the West Indian / Caribbrean community, particularly the Trinidadian and Tobagonian British population, many of whom have lived in the area since the 1950s. The carnival has attracted up to 2 million people in the past, making it the second largest street festival in the world. The celebration centres around a parade of floats, dancers and sound systems.
    20110828notting hill carnivalDE.jpg
  • A landscape of fields and farming land looking in the direction of Napoleons massed French lines during the Battle of Waterloo, on 25th March 2017, at Waterloo, Belgium. Waterloo was fought  on 18 June 1815 between a French army under Napoleon Bonaparte,  defeated by two of the armies of the Seventh Coalition: an Anglo-led Allied army under the command of the Duke of Wellington, and a Prussian army under the command of Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher, resulting in 41,000 casualties.
    waterloo_battlefield-22-25-03-2017.jpg
  • The landscape of fields and farming land including La Haye Sainte farm, the location of the Battle of Waterloo, on 25th March 2017, at Waterloo, Belgium. La Haye Sainte has changed very little since it played a crucial part in the Battle of Waterloo on 18 June 1815.<br />
It was defended by about 400 British and German troops, hopelessly outnumbered by attacking French but held out until the late afternoon when they retired because their ammunition had run out. If Napoleon Bonapartes army had captured La Haye Sainte earlier in the day, almost certainly he would have broken through the allied centre and defeated the Duke of Wellingtons army. The Battle of Waterloo was fought on 18 June 1815. A French army under Napoleon Bonaparte was defeated by two of the armies of the Seventh Coalition: an Anglo-led Allied army under the command of the Duke of Wellington, and a Prussian army under the command of Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher, resulting in 41,000 casualties.
    waterloo_battlefield-20-25-03-2017.jpg
  • As the community fill up their water butts and buckets, a young girl drinks fresh water from a cup supplied by a water tanker, provided by Thames Water during the southern England drought of 1989. During the heatwave that saw reservoirs depleted and in the south west, dry up altogether. A hosepipe ban and in some areas, tap water failed too so tankers stationed in affected areas so locals could fill up for essential use. Tourism increased as people visited tourist areas e.g. beaches at the weekends and took holidays in the UK rather than travelling abroad for the sun
    community_drought01-21-07-1989_1.jpg
  • A flanker waiting on the Moor with his dog during a grouse shoot in Upper Nidderdale, North Yorkshire, UK. The flankers job is to drive the grouse back with a flag towards the 'guns' who are waiting in the shooting butts.
    Nidd 117-11_1.jpg
  • A flanker standing on the Moor and waiting during a grouse shoot in Upper Nidderdale, North Yorkshire, UK. The flankers job is to drive the grouse using a flag back towards the 'guns' who are waiting in the shooting butts.
    Nidd 117-10_1.jpg
  • Beater with his dog on a grouse shoot, Bransdale, North York Moors, North Yorkshire, UK. Beaters use flags to drive the grouse towards the guns, who stand in shooting butts.
    38-02_1.jpg
  • The curling shadows of shrubs at a place for smokers outside a Mayfair restaurant, central London. Seen in the sunlight of a winter's day, the shadows of shapes and forms appear on the white wall at the place where customers are expected to stand for a smoke, their cigarette butts can be pressed into the wall-mounted receptacle to help stop the littering of the capital's streets. The green shrubs have been immaculately trimmed into perfect shapes and the curling shadow on the main plant looks like curling smoke - a coincidental and humourous scene.
    shrub_shadows01-28-01-2016_1.jpg
  • A cigarette butt is illuminated in the patterns formed by light and shadow landing on the floor of a building in London, England, United Kingdom.
    20160820_light and shadow_001.jpg
  • Courier bike is locked up on post near yellow and red stripes on office building side street. Propped up against a lamp post which as a cigarette butt and gum receptacle and near a parking payment unit, the bicycle has bright orange wheels and handlebars. On the wall in the background are yellow-sprayed stripes that go off into the distance. A discarded bottle of water lies in the gutter and a coffee cup has been wedged into the air conditioning grill.
    city_bike01-13-02-2014.jpg
  • A businessman strides along a London street holding a banana whose shadow appears to be part of another man's anatomy. As strong sunlight shines on this part of a London pavement, we see the confident stride of the man in the foreground, probably on his way back from a lunchtime stroll and returning to his office with the fresh fruit and a sandwich. What cannot be anticipated by the viewer, or by the second man, is that the banana has superimposed itself to the exact place of his groin area. The banana, by its very curved shape has long been the butt of sexual innuendo and double-entendre. The surrogate penis being the perfect adult pun.
    banana_man01-15-01-1991_1.jpg
  • Female colleagues enjoy a chat over an alfresco lunch in the city alongside an art installation of women at the beach. Rather suggestively we see, one lady eating a fresh banana to suggest a sexual act but this is in the open air at one of the City of London’s financial district’s landmarks, Broadgate that is adjacent to Liverpool Street Station whose arched Victorian roof is seen in the background. The scene is of the female gender, taking a well-earned break from office life, while perhaps, dreaming of and planning their next holiday vacation on a tropical beach. The working women and their leisurely counterparts are juxtaposed from an unknown artist’s installation in London. The banana, by its very curved shape has long been the butt of sexual innuendo and double-entendre. The surrogate penis being the perfect adult pun.
    banana_girl01-18-05-1995_1.jpg
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