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  • Looking down from a high viewpoint, prospective auction bidders take notes from their catalogues of old red British Telecom (BT) pay phone boxes which are lined up on display in their hundreds before the actual sale starts. The 'lots' are squeezed together along pathways allowing customers to thoroughly inspect their potential purchases' details. This is a wide-angle picture taken on the slant with the distant boxes curling around to the left. One man in blue who has opened the stiff-opening door, cranes his neck to look up into the ceiling of these solid cast-iron frames. The K-series kiosks were largely designed in 1936 by the iconic designer Giles Gilbert Scott.
    RB-0059.jpg
  • A close-up portrait of a young man in his late-twenties street portrait with moustache. The mustache is well-waxed to keep its upturned shape and is generally known as a handlebar style of facial growth. Focus is on the curled hair and eyes rather than on his clothing and urban background. The fellow is stylish and is very self-confident as he makes a bold statement of his own youth and gender.
    moustache_men49-28-May-2011.jpg
  • A close-up portrait of a young man in his late-twenties street portrait with moustache. The mustache is well-waxed to keep its upturned shape and is generally known as a handlebar style of facial growth. Focus is on the curled hair and eyes rather than on his clothing and urban background. The fellow is stylish and is very self-confident as he makes a bold statement of his own youth and gender.
    moustache_men45-28-May-2011-2.jpg
  • A close-up portrait of a young man in his late-twenties street portrait with moustache. The mustache is well-waxed to keep its upturned shape and is generally known as a handlebar style of facial growth. Focus is on the curled hair and eyes rather than on his clothing and urban background. The fellow is stylish and is very self-confident as he makes a bold statement of his own youth and gender.
    moustache_men39-28-May-2011-2.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
  • Kristin Hersh curling her eyelashes backstage. Throwing Muses at the Islington Assembly Hall, London, UK. Throwing Muses are an alternative rock band founded in 1980. The group was originally fronted by two lead singers, Kristin Hersh, and Tanya Donelly. Known for performing music with shifting tempos, creative chord progressions, unorthodox song structures, and surreal lyrics, the group was set apart from other contemporary acts by Hersh's stark, writing style, David Narcizo's unusual drumming techniques almost totally without cymbals and Bernard Georges’ driving baselines.
    20140925_throwing muses backstage ma...jpg
  • Kristin Hersh curling her eyelashes backstage. Throwing Muses at the Islington Assembly Hall, London, UK. Throwing Muses are an alternative rock band founded in 1980. The group was originally fronted by two lead singers, Kristin Hersh, and Tanya Donelly. Known for performing music with shifting tempos, creative chord progressions, unorthodox song structures, and surreal lyrics, the group was set apart from other contemporary acts by Hersh's stark, writing style, David Narcizo's unusual drumming techniques almost totally without cymbals and Bernard Georges’ driving baselines.
    20140926_throwing muses backstage ma...jpg
  • A 12 year-old boy walks along a frozen rural road with his pet dog following alongside during wintry conditions in North Somerset. The viewer also follows on as the lad walks towards his home on a hill, set near the bare mid-winter trees during a particularly nasty period of the Christmas holiday period. The boy's house is in the distance with wood smoke curling from two chimneys. The smoke wafts across the remote road in the Mendip Hills, recently cleared of snow but still deceptively icy. The low sun is slightly obscured by bare branches and offers little warmth to this bleak landscape.
    snow_walk20-26-12-2010_1_1.jpg
  • Airline travel poster ad with London Monument landmark background. The famous tower that serves as a memorial to the Great Fire of London in 1666, which is estimated to have destroyed the homes of 70,000 of the City's 80,000 inhabitants. The death toll is unknown but traditionally thought to have been small, as only six verified deaths were recorded. In the foreground is a poster seen through the office's window, showing a woman traveller curled up in a first class airline cabin.
    monument_reflection01-02-01-2015_1.jpg
  • From beneath a stone bridge that crosses the Allt an Eas River at Eas Falls, near Kilbrennan, Isle of Mull, Scotland. The fast-flowing river curls downhill under the locally-sourced stonework to soon fall steeply into the distant Loch Tuath with the Island of Ulva, the headland beyond. Eas Fors Waterfall is one of the most spectacular waterfalls on the island, situated just off the B8073, a couple of miles North of Ulva Ferry. Eas is Gaelic for waterfall, Fors is Norse for waterfall and the final fall plunges 100 feet over the edge of the cliff to the sea below.
    isle_of_mull259-20-11-2011_1.jpg
  • As a sleeping homeless man lies curled up in his sleeping bag on a central London pavement, two window cleaners have carefully placed their ladders at his feet to clean a Boots the chemist sign. Each wearing identical blue working overalls and each wiping the frontage with their left hands, the men are symbolic of the working man versus that of a homeless person without a job, prospects or perhaps a future. The wide gap between hopelessness and the pride of one's achievement is shown here on the sidewalk of modern-day Britain. London is home to some 50,000 homeless people whose place of rest can often be recesses and shop doorways where they seek sanctuary from the cold and street violence. On the opposite end of the wealth and social divides are those who seek work with a positive outlook on life.
    homeless_ladders03-16-1993_1.jpg
  • Curled up under a duvet on a sofa, a teenager sleeps off a late night, the morning after a birthday party in a countryside barn, on 23rd June 2019, in Kington, Herefordshire, England.
    herefordshire-23-23-06-2019.jpg
  • Spots and loops theme shadows on floor of a newly-constructed building in Southwark, south London. Seen through the plate glass window of a newly-developed office property are the dots from shadows of the glass' design and curled lines from cabling that has been left on the floor awaiting use by future occupiers. There is a green tint to the window from the street in the capital.
    window_spots03-18-02-2015_1.jpg
  • An aerial landscape view of a railway network whose tracks and rails converge on a station in central London. Three trains filled with commuters all make their way into this unseen railway hub. The route curls away into the distance, slicing its way through the capital. London Rail is a directorate of Transport for London (TFL), involved in the relationship with the National Rail network within London, UK. It manages non-tube rail systems in London. Railways started to change the landscape of London itself, followed by its suburbs in the mid to late 19th century when streets and neighbourhoods were cut in half by the new infrastructure.
    railway_trains-13-05-1993.jpg
  • A farm vehicle drives in winter light over the traditional stone bridge built from locally sourced materials over the Allt an Eas River at Eas Falls, near Kilbrennan, Isle of Mull, Scotland. Beneath the bridge is the fast-flowing river that curls downhill, falling steeply into the distant Loch Tuath with the Island of Ulva, the headland beyond. Eas Fors Waterfall is one of the most spectacular waterfalls on the island, situated just off the B8073, a couple of miles North of Ulva Ferry. Eas is Gaelic for waterfall, Fors is Norse for waterfall and the final fall plunges 100 feet over the edge of the cliff to the sea below.
    isle_of_mull292-21-11-2011_1.jpg
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