Show Navigation

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 66 images found }

Loading ()...

  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_U.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_J.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_F.jpg
  • Pingit website on a Mac laptop computer. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit website laptop_F.jpg
  • Pingit website on a Mac laptop computer. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit website laptop_B.jpg
  • Pingit website on a Mac laptop computer. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit website laptop_A.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_T.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_R.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_O.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_M.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_L.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_K.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_I.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_H.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_D.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_B.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_A.jpg
  • Pingit website on a Mac laptop computer. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit website laptop_E.jpg
  • Pingit website on a Mac laptop computer. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit website laptop_D.jpg
  • Pingit website on a Mac laptop computer. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit website laptop_C.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_Q.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_P.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_N.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_G.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_E.jpg
  • Pingit app being downloaded / used onto an iPhone. Barclays bank launched Europe's first money sending service that allows UK current account customers to send and receive cash through their mobile phones, 16th February 2012. Barclays' customers can download the bank's Pingit app to their smartphone and start making instant money transfers to anyone with a UK-based mobile phone and a current account with any UK bank. The app, which will be extended to all UK banking customers by early March, is free to use. It is aimed at an increasingly mobile-orientated public who use their phone to manage many aspects of their lives.
    20120216pingit iphone app_C.jpg
  • A local man sweeps away dust beneath a poster for healthy living with wasteground dereliction in Luxor, Nile Valley, Egypt. The Faragalla group was founded in 1973 by Eng. Mohamed Farag Amer and produce over one thousand different products in the field of processed meat and chicken, frozen vegetables & fruits, concentrated fruit juices and pulp, packed fruit juices in glass and tetrapak, confectioneries, bakeries, tomato paste , jams, processed cheese, chicken stock and instant juice powder etc. The group is considered to be one of the biggest and most diversified food companies in the Middle East, exporting to more than 130 countries all over the world including USA, Western Europe, Middle east and Africa.
    egypt538-10-03-2016_1.jpg
  • Glastonbury Festival, 2015.<br />
Group of girls all dressed up inhaling baloons of nitrous oxide, or laughing gas, (which gives an instant high) in the camping grounds before the big night out.<br />
Technically laughing gas falls into a legal grey area, coming under the ‘legal high’ bracket as it is used by some dentists as an anaesthetic. Although it is not illegal to possess and inhale the substance, it is illegal to supply it to anyone under the age of 18.<br />
In an attempt to tackle legal highs, the government's Psychoactive Substances Bill intends to prohibit the sale of mood-altering drugs without a medical purpose.
    _F3A6238_1.jpg
  • Glastonbury Festival, 2015.<br />
Group of girls all dressed up inhaling baloons of nitrous oxide, or laughing gas, (which gives an instant high) in the camping grounds before the big night out.<br />
Technically laughing gas falls into a legal grey area, coming under the ‘legal high’ bracket as it is used by some dentists as an anaesthetic. Although it is not illegal to possess and inhale the substance, it is illegal to supply it to anyone under the age of 18.<br />
In an attempt to tackle legal highs, the government's Psychoactive Substances Bill intends to prohibit the sale of mood-altering drugs without a medical purpose.
    _F3A6213_1.jpg
  • Glastonbury Festival, 2015.<br />
Group of girls all dressed up inhaling baloons of nitrous oxide, or laughing gas, (which gives an instant high) in the camping grounds before the big night out.<br />
Technically laughing gas falls into a legal grey area, coming under the ‘legal high’ bracket as it is used by some dentists as an anaesthetic. Although it is not illegal to possess and inhale the substance, it is illegal to supply it to anyone under the age of 18.<br />
In an attempt to tackle legal highs, the government's Psychoactive Substances Bill intends to prohibit the sale of mood-altering drugs without a medical purpose.
    _F3A6191_1.jpg
  • Jeremy King with his partner Chris Corbin have been the driving force behind some of London’s best-loved restaurants for more than 20 years. They propelled the historic Le Caprice, The Ivy and J Sheekey restaurants back into the limelight and their most recent venture, the Wolseley in Piccadilly, was an instant hit.
    _O7F2029.jpg
  • Glastonbury Festival, 2015.<br />
Group of girls all dressed up inhaling baloons of nitrous oxide, or laughing gas, (which gives an instant high) in the camping grounds before the big night out.<br />
Technically laughing gas falls into a legal grey area, coming under the ‘legal high’ bracket as it is used by some dentists as an anaesthetic. Although it is not illegal to possess and inhale the substance, it is illegal to supply it to anyone under the age of 18.<br />
In an attempt to tackle legal highs, the government's Psychoactive Substances Bill intends to prohibit the sale of mood-altering drugs without a medical purpose.
    _F3A6204_1.jpg
  • Queue waiting for bus in North Kensington in front of Fiat advertising poster. The Fiat 127 was one of the first of the modern superminis, and won praise for its utilisation of space  as well as its road-holding. The 127 was an instant success, winning the European Car of the Year award for 1972, and quickly became one of the best-selling cars in Europe for several years. Coming and Going is a project commissioned by the Museum of London for photographer Barry Lewis in 1976 to document the transport system as it is used by passengers and commuters using public transport by trains, tubes and buses in London, UK.
    31 Coming and going_1_1.jpg
  • Outside the original Patisserie Valerie in Soho central London. The was the first store on Old Compton Street, that has now become a very successful chain of patisseries. <br />
<br />
Patisserie Valerie was originally conceived in Frith Street Soho in 1926 by Madam Valerie. She came to London on a mission to introduce fine Continental Patisserie to the English. It was an instant success.<br />
<br />
During the Second World War the Frith Street premises were bombed by the Luftwaffe and Madam Valerie subsequently set up shop around the corner in Old Compton Street where her legacy continues to this day in our Soho branch.<br />
<br />
The unique café-atmosphere includes the decor left over from the 1950's epitomised by the now famous Toulouse-Lautrec style cartoons by Terroni.
    20110118patisserie valerieA.jpg
  • Tombola stall at the local community Sunday market in the village of Husthwaite, North Yorkshire, England, UK. Over 20 stalls with a mixture of old favourites and new stalls lelling locally made products. A tombola is a raffle in which the prizes are already assigned to winning tickets before the start. Players pay for a ticket, which they then draw out from a revolving box, and can instantly see whether or not they have won a prize. Tombolas are popular at events such as coffee mornings, when it is expected that not all the players will be present at the end of the event.
    20150913_husthwaite village market t...jpg
  • Tombola stall at the local community Sunday market in the village of Husthwaite, North Yorkshire, England, UK. Over 20 stalls with a mixture of old favourites and new stalls lelling locally made products. A tombola is a raffle in which the prizes are already assigned to winning tickets before the start. Players pay for a ticket, which they then draw out from a revolving box, and can instantly see whether or not they have won a prize. Tombolas are popular at events such as coffee mornings, when it is expected that not all the players will be present at the end of the event.
    20150913_husthwaite village market t...jpg
  • Polish Orthodox women in prayer. Grabarka, Poland. The Holy Mount of Grabarka is considered to be the holiest location in Poland for Orthodox Christians. A miracle occured here in 1710 during a deadly outbreak of Cholera in the region. According to legend an old man receivedan order from God to lead the people to the mountain, plant a cross and pray for salvation. The villagers followed and the epidemic ended almost instantly. To commemorate the miracle people palnt crosses on the site.
    7349_28a_1_1.jpg
  • Polish Orthodox women in prayer. Grabarka, Poland. The Holy Mount of Grabarka is considered to be the holiest location in Poland for Orthodox Christians. A miracle occured here in 1710 during a deadly outbreak of Cholera in the region. According to legend an old man receivedan order from God to lead the people to the mountain, plant a cross and pray for salvation. The villagers followed and the epidemic ended almost instantly. To commemorate the miracle people palnt crosses on the site.
    7349_16a_1_1.jpg
  • An interior of office desks and 90s computers in the trading floor of Barclays de Zoete Wedd in the City of London, the capital's financial centre. Screens glow with the most up to date trading figures and news items allowing traders to react instantly on the money markets.  <br />
Employees talk on handsets or stare at their data near large keyboards and hard drives and deep monitors were state of the art technology in the early 1990s.
    trading_floor03-20-04-1993_1_1.jpg
  • On the 3rd birthday of an Orthodox Jewish boy he has his first ever hair cut in a ceremony called an Upsherin leaving his peyos (sideburns) to grow. Passing a mirror in his hallway this is the first moment he ever sees himself with short hair and a kippah on his head. A kippah is said to be ‘A blessing on the head’ and is perhaps the most instantly identifiable mark of a Jew. He will now begin to learn the Torah.
    04-Upsherin_3675.jpg
  • On the 3rd birthday of a Orthodox Jewish boy he has his first ever hair cut leaving his peyos (sideburns) to grow. His Grandfather then places a kippah on his head for the first ever time. A kippah is said to be ‘A blessing on the head’ and is perhaps the most instantly identifiable mark of a Jew. With both his Grandfathers either side he now begins to learn the Alpha bet so he can read the Torah.
    04-Upsherin_3650.jpg
  • A currency banker with the British Union Jack above his desk, rubs tired eyes while working in front of 90s computers in the currency trading floor of National Westminster Bank PLC in the City of London, the capitals financial centre, on 20th May 1992, in London, England. Screens glow with the most up to date trading figures and news items allowing traders to react instantly on the money markets.
    city04-22-06-1993.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of Ripon City Morris Dancers at the 31st York Festival of Traditional Dance on 8th September 2018. Ripon City Morris Dancers are a North West Morris dancing team from Ripon in North Yorkshire instantly recognisable by their patriotic costume and fresh flowered hats
    DSCF3219cc.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of Ripon City Morris Dancers at the 31st York Festival of Traditional Dance on 8th September 2018. Ripon City Morris Dancers are a North West Morris dancing team from Ripon in North Yorkshire instantly recognisable by their patriotic costume and fresh flowered hats
    DSCF3215cc.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of Ripon City Morris Dancers at the 31st York Festival of Traditional Dance on 8th September 2018. Ripon City Morris Dancers are a North West Morris dancing team from Ripon in North Yorkshire instantly recognisable by their patriotic costume and fresh flowered hats
    DSCF3211cc.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of Ripon City Morris Dancers at the 31st York Festival of Traditional Dance on 8th September 2018. Ripon City Morris Dancers are a North West Morris dancing team from Ripon in North Yorkshire instantly recognisable by their patriotic costume and fresh flowered hats
    DSCF3207cc.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of Ripon City Morris Dancers at the 31st York Festival of Traditional Dance on 8th September 2018. Ripon City Morris Dancers are a North West Morris dancing team from Ripon in North Yorkshire instantly recognisable by their patriotic costume and fresh flowered hats
    DSCF3189cc.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of Ripon City Morris Dancers at the 31st York Festival of Traditional Dance on 8th September 2018. Ripon City Morris Dancers are a North West Morris dancing team from Ripon in North Yorkshire instantly recognisable by their patriotic costume and fresh flowered hats
    DSCF3204cc.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of Ripon City Morris Dancers at the 31st York Festival of Traditional Dance on 8th September 2018. Ripon City Morris Dancers are a North West Morris dancing team from Ripon in North Yorkshire instantly recognisable by their patriotic costume and fresh flowered hats
    DSCF3194cc.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of Ripon City Morris Dancers at the 31st York Festival of Traditional Dance on 8th September 2018. Ripon City Morris Dancers are a North West Morris dancing team from Ripon in North Yorkshire instantly recognisable by their patriotic costume and fresh flowered hats
    DSCF3191cc.jpg
  • Tombola stall at the local community Sunday market in the village of Husthwaite, North Yorkshire, England, UK. Over 20 stalls with a mixture of old favourites and new stalls lelling locally made products. A tombola is a raffle in which the prizes are already assigned to winning tickets before the start. Players pay for a ticket, which they then draw out from a revolving box, and can instantly see whether or not they have won a prize. Tombolas are popular at events such as coffee mornings, when it is expected that not all the players will be present at the end of the event.
    20150913_husthwaite village market t...jpg
  • Tombola stall at the local community Sunday market in the village of Husthwaite, North Yorkshire, England, UK. Over 20 stalls with a mixture of old favourites and new stalls lelling locally made products. A tombola is a raffle in which the prizes are already assigned to winning tickets before the start. Players pay for a ticket, which they then draw out from a revolving box, and can instantly see whether or not they have won a prize. Tombolas are popular at events such as coffee mornings, when it is expected that not all the players will be present at the end of the event.
    20150913_husthwaite village market t...jpg
  • Tombola stall at the local community Sunday market in the village of Husthwaite, North Yorkshire, England, UK. Over 20 stalls with a mixture of old favourites and new stalls lelling locally made products. A tombola is a raffle in which the prizes are already assigned to winning tickets before the start. Players pay for a ticket, which they then draw out from a revolving box, and can instantly see whether or not they have won a prize. Tombolas are popular at events such as coffee mornings, when it is expected that not all the players will be present at the end of the event.
    20150913_husthwaite village market t...jpg
  • Tombola stall at the local community Sunday market in the village of Husthwaite, North Yorkshire, England, UK. Over 20 stalls with a mixture of old favourites and new stalls lelling locally made products. A tombola is a raffle in which the prizes are already assigned to winning tickets before the start. Players pay for a ticket, which they then draw out from a revolving box, and can instantly see whether or not they have won a prize. Tombolas are popular at events such as coffee mornings, when it is expected that not all the players will be present at the end of the event.
    20150913_husthwaite village market t...jpg
  • Tombola stall at the local community Sunday market in the village of Husthwaite, North Yorkshire, England, UK. Over 20 stalls with a mixture of old favourites and new stalls lelling locally made products. A tombola is a raffle in which the prizes are already assigned to winning tickets before the start. Players pay for a ticket, which they then draw out from a revolving box, and can instantly see whether or not they have won a prize. Tombolas are popular at events such as coffee mornings, when it is expected that not all the players will be present at the end of the event.
    20150913_husthwaite village market t...jpg
  • Tombola stall at the local community Sunday market in the village of Husthwaite, North Yorkshire, England, UK. Over 20 stalls with a mixture of old favourites and new stalls lelling locally made products. A tombola is a raffle in which the prizes are already assigned to winning tickets before the start. Players pay for a ticket, which they then draw out from a revolving box, and can instantly see whether or not they have won a prize. Tombolas are popular at events such as coffee mornings, when it is expected that not all the players will be present at the end of the event.
    20150913_husthwaite village market t...jpg
  • Tombola stall at the local community Sunday market in the village of Husthwaite, North Yorkshire, England, UK. Over 20 stalls with a mixture of old favourites and new stalls lelling locally made products. A tombola is a raffle in which the prizes are already assigned to winning tickets before the start. Players pay for a ticket, which they then draw out from a revolving box, and can instantly see whether or not they have won a prize. Tombolas are popular at events such as coffee mornings, when it is expected that not all the players will be present at the end of the event.
    20150913_husthwaite village market t...jpg
  • Polish Orthodox women in prayer. Grabarka, Poland. The Holy Mount of Grabarka is considered to be the holiest location in Poland for Orthodox Christians. A miracle occured here in 1710 during a deadly outbreak of Cholera in the region. According to legend an old man receivedan order from God to lead the people to the mountain, plant a cross and pray for salvation. The villagers followed and the epidemic ended almost instantly. To commemorate the miracle people palnt crosses on the site.
    7354_16_1_1.jpg
  • Polish Orthodox women in prayer. Grabarka, Poland. The Holy Mount of Grabarka is considered to be the holiest location in Poland for Orthodox Christians. A miracle occured here in 1710 during a deadly outbreak of Cholera in the region. According to legend an old man receivedan order from God to lead the people to the mountain, plant a cross and pray for salvation. The villagers followed and the epidemic ended almost instantly. To commemorate the miracle people palnt crosses on the site.
    7347_5_1_1.jpg
  • Polish Orthodox women in prayer. Grabarka, Poland. The Holy Mount of Grabarka is considered to be the holiest location in Poland for Orthodox Christians. A miracle occured here in 1710 during a deadly outbreak of Cholera in the region. According to legend an old man receivedan order from God to lead the people to the mountain, plant a cross and pray for salvation. The villagers followed and the epidemic ended almost instantly. To commemorate the miracle people palnt crosses on the site.
    7335_26_1_1.jpg
  • Polish Orthodox women in prayer. Grabarka, Poland. The Holy Mount of Grabarka is considered to be the holiest location in Poland for Orthodox Christians. A miracle occured here in 1710 during a deadly outbreak of Cholera in the region. According to legend an old man receivedan order from God to lead the people to the mountain, plant a cross and pray for salvation. The villagers followed and the epidemic ended almost instantly. To commemorate the miracle people palnt crosses on the site.
    7314_35_1_1.jpg
  • An actor is laced into a costume before a performance of the Hindu epic, the Ramayana. The costume is the most distinctive characteristic of Kathakali.  The makeup is very elaborate and the costumes are very large and heavy. There are several kinds of costume. There are: Sathwika (the hero), Kathi (the villain), Minukku (females), and Thatti. These basic divisions are further subdivided in a way which is very well known to Malayali (Keralite) audiences.  Each character is instantly recognisable by their characteristic makeup and costume.The Kalamandalam was founded in the 1930's to preserve the ancient forms of Keralan arts and dance of which Kathikali, a mute mixture of ballet and drama is the most well known..Cherathuruty, Kerala, India
    SFE_030212_0046.jpg
  • An interior of office desks and 90s computers in the trading floor of The Chemical Bank in the City of London, the capital's financial centre. Screens glow with the most up to date trading figures and news items allowing traders to react instantly on the money markets. Large keyboards and hard drives and deep monitors were state of the art technology in the early 1990s.
    trading_floor04-20-04-1993_1_1.jpg
  • An interior of office desks and 90s computers in the currency trading floor of National Westminster Bank PLC in the City of London, the capital's financial centre. Screens glow with the most up to date trading figures and news items allowing traders to react instantly on the money markets. A lady employee stares at her data near a large keyboard and hard drives and deep monitors were state of the art technology in the early 1990s.
    trading_floor01-20-05-1992_1_1.jpg
  • Southbank's Festival of the World staircase landscape with part of Korean artist Choi Jeong Hwa's hundreds of bright green plastic colanders around the grey columns, instantly transforming them into exotic plants. The legs of a person climbs the bright yellow stairs and a contractor in a matching green t-shirt to the colanders walks underneath. Southbank's events (on the south bank of the Thames) are a summer-long Festival of the World made up of many smaller festivals and weekends. Together they create our story showing how art is changing the globe in surprising and exciting ways.
    south_bank02-22-06-2012_1_1.jpg
  • In Stamford Hill, London, United Kingdom, on the 3rd birthday of a Orthodox Jewish boy he has his first ever hair cut leaving his peyos (sideburns) to grow. His Grandfather then places a kippah on his head for the first ever time. A kippah is said to be ‘A blessing on the head’ and is perhaps the most instantly identifiable mark of a Jew. He will now begin to learn the Torah.
    04-Upsherin_3626.jpg
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

In Pictures

  • About
  • Contact
  • Join In Pictures
  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area