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  • H&T pawnbrokers shop front on a high street in Hackney, London, United Kingdom.  A pawnbroker is an individual or business that offers secured loans to people, with items of personal property used as collateral.  If an item is pawned for a loan, within a certain contractual period of time the pawner may redeem it for the amount of the loan plus some agreed-upon amount for interest. The amount of time, and rate of interest, is governed by law or by the pawnbroker's policies.  Increasing numbers of people in Britain are using pawnbrokers to survive financial crises.
    UK-Pawnbrokers-0231.jpg
  • A street view of the shop front of The Money Shop in Lewisham, London, United Kingdom.  The shop offers pawnbroking, money loans, money transfers and foreign exchange.  These shops are often found in poor and deprived areas of the country.
    UK-Lewisham-Money-Shop-0221_1.jpg
  • A young lady sits at her kitchen table counting her money to pay the household bills.
    UK-Finance-Household-Money-7234.jpg
  • A young lady sits at her kitchen table counting her money to pay the household bills.
    UK-Finance-Household-Money-7199.jpg
  • A young lady sits at her kitchen table at home checking over the household bills.  he rising costs of all the household bills. Dealing with debt. Household utility bills making it difficult for a British<br />
home owner to afford. Difficulty paying gas and electricity bills is common<br />
as the economic downturn makes personal finances feel the pinch. London, UK.
    UK-Finance-Household-Money-7128.jpg
  • A young lady sits at her kitchen table counting her money to pay the household bills.
    UK-Finance-Household-Money-7273.jpg
  • A young lady sits at her kitchen table counting her money to pay the household bills.
    UK-Finance-Household-Money-7257.jpg
  • A young lady sits at her kitchen table counting her money to pay the household bills.
    UK-Finance-Household-Money-7231.jpg
  • A young lady sits at her kitchen table counting her money to pay the household bills.
    UK-Finance-Household-Money-7216.jpg
  • A young lady sits at her kitchen table counting her money to pay the household bills.
    UK-Finance-Household-Money-7182.jpg
  • A young lady sits at her kitchen table at home checking over the household bills. Dealing with debt. Household utility bills making it difficult for a British<br />
home owner to afford. Difficulty paying gas and electricity bills is common<br />
as the economic downturn makes personal finances feel the pinch. London, UK.
    UK-Finance-Household-Money-7177.jpg
  • A young lady sits at her kitchen table at home checking over the household bills. Dealing with debt. Household utility bills making it difficult for a British<br />
home owner to afford. Difficulty paying gas and electricity bills is common<br />
as the economic downturn makes personal finances feel the pinch. London, UK.
    UK-Finance-Household-Money-7174.jpg
  • A young lady sits at her kitchen table at home checking over the household bills. Dealing with debt. Household utility bills making it difficult for a British<br />
home owner to afford. Difficulty paying gas and electricity bills is common<br />
as the economic downturn makes personal finances feel the pinch. London, UK.
    UK-Finance-Household-Money-7154.jpg
  • A young lady sits at her kitchen table at home checking over the household bills. Dealing with debt. Household utility bills making it difficult for a British<br />
home owner to afford. Difficulty paying gas and electricity bills is common<br />
as the economic downturn makes personal finances feel the pinch. London, UK.
    UK-Finance-Household-Money-7147.jpg
  • A young lady sits at her kitchen table at home checking over the household bills. Dealing with debt. Household utility bills making it difficult for a British<br />
home owner to afford. Difficulty paying gas and electricity bills is common<br />
as the economic downturn makes personal finances feel the pinch. London, UK.
    UK-Finance-Household-Money-7143.jpg
  • A young lady sits at her kitchen table at home checking over the household bills. Dealing with debt. Household utility bills making it difficult for a British<br />
home owner to afford. Difficulty paying gas and electricity bills is common<br />
as the economic downturn makes personal finances feel the pinch. London, UK.
    UK-Finance-Household-Money-7135.jpg
  • A young lady sits at her kitchen table at home checking over the household bills. Dealing with debt. Household utility bills making it difficult for a British<br />
home owner to afford. Difficulty paying gas and electricity bills is common<br />
as the economic downturn makes personal finances feel the pinch. London, UK.
    UK-Finance-Household-Money-7129.jpg
  • Detail of yellow London brick stock laid in English Garden Bond on a south London Edwardian house. Rows of brick and cement, known as mortar are laid in courses called bonds and here, this style of ordering them is specifically, Sussex Bond. The stock of brick is London Stock, a yellowish colour favoured by Victorian and Edwardian buildings in the south-east of England. This was made locally in Suffolk and Kent and transported up-river on stumpies or brickies - kinds of Thames sailing barges. But bricks and mortar is also a metaphor for home ownership and in the economic sense, the value and security of investing in property.
    bricks_detail02-21-01-2014.jpg
  • Street view of a high-street cash converters shop in Lewisham, South London, United Kingdom.  A few people are waiting outside the shop and one man is looking at the jewelry section of the window display.  This is a pawn shop which also cashes cheques.
    UK-Poverty-Cash-converters-0190_1.jpg
  • Street view of a high-street cash converters shop in Lewisham, South London, United Kingdom.  A few people are waiting outside the shop and one man is looking at the jewelry section of the window display.  This is a pawn shop which also cashes cheques.
    UK-Poverty-Cash-converters-0176_1.jpg
  • Former British Prime Minister Edward Heath greets the Chinese Panda Ming Ming at London Zoo, on loan from the Chinese government as part of a breeding programme, on 22nd October 1991, in London, England. Edward Heath met with Premier Li Peng and agreed to loan a female panda to London Zoo for an international breeding project. But London Zoo’s male panda Chia Chia unfortunately died in the week before her arrival and the other male, Bao Bao, and Ming Ming didn’t get on and on the first day that both pandas were in the same enclosure, it all went wrong when the play-fight that normally precedes the mating process with pandas turned nasty and Ming Ming was badly injured. She lost part of an ear, had two infections and needed surgery and antibiotics. The risks were too great to put them together again and they performed artificial insemination on Ming Ming in 1992 and 1993 but it didn’t work. Ming Ming, the world’s oldest panda died on the morning of May 7, 2011 at the age of approximately 34.
    panda_heath-22-10-1991.jpg
  • Cash Generator shop in Kings Heath, Birmingham, United Kingdom. Cash Generator is a British based national pawn broker. The company describes itself as The Buy, Sell & Loan Store. Its core business is the buying and selling of second hand goods, mainly electrical and entertainment products.
    20170620_cash generator_001.jpg
  • An animal rights activist from Animal Rebellion suspends a pinata from above a branch of Barclays Bank in Tottenham Court Road during a protest on 4 September 2020 in London, United Kingdom. Animal Rebellion were protesting against the provision by Barclays Bank of loans and underwriting to beef and dairy companies which are huge contributors to climate change.
    MK-20200904-Animal-Rebellion-Anti-Ba...jpg
  • An animal rights activist from Animal Rebellion strikes a pinata suspended from above a branch of Barclays Bank in Tottenham Court Road during a protest on 4 September 2020 in London, United Kingdom. Animal Rebellion were protesting against the provision by Barclays Bank of loans and underwriting to beef and dairy companies which are huge contributors to climate change.
    MK-20200904-Animal-Rebellion-Anti-Ba...jpg
  • An animal rights activist from Animal Rebellion suspends a pinata from above a branch of Barclays Bank in Tottenham Court Road during a protest on 4 September 2020 in London, United Kingdom. Animal Rebellion were protesting against the provision by Barclays Bank of loans and underwriting to beef and dairy companies which are huge contributors to climate change.
    MK-20200904-Animal-Rebellion-Anti-Ba...jpg
  • The UK government has announced a Coronavirus pandemic financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England which is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But venues such as The Apollo Theatre on Shaftesbury Avenue in Londons West End Theatreland, where the musical Jamie was abandoned at the beginning of lockdown, will remain closed for the foreseeable future, on 6th July 2020, in London, England. Some theatres in London and others around the country have been wrapped in bright pink barrier tape, which reads Missing Live Theatre -  a protest project led by stage designers group Scene Change highlighting the closure of the arts and culture arts industry supports 137,250 jobs and is worth £21.2bn in direct turnover.
    coronavirus_WestEnd-01-06-07-2020.jpg
  • The UK government has announced a Coronavirus pandemic financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England which is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But venues such as The Old Vic theatre in Waterloo will remain for the foreseeable future, on 6th July 2020, in London, England. Some theatres in London and others around the country have been wrapped in bright pink barrier tape, which reads Missing Live Theatre -  a protest project led by stage designers group Scene Change. The arts and culture arts industry supports 137,250 jobs and is worth £21.2bn in direct turnover.
    coronavirus_OldVic-05-06-07-2020.jpg
  • The UK government has announced a Coronavirus pandemic financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England which is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But venues such as The Old Vic theatre in Waterloo will remain for the foreseeable future, on 6th July 2020, in London, England. Some theatres in London and others around the country have been wrapped in bright pink barrier tape, which reads Missing Live Theatre -  a protest project led by stage designers group Scene Change. The arts and culture arts industry supports 137,250 jobs and is worth £21.2bn in direct turnover.
    coronavirus_OldVic-01-06-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-21-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-05-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-11-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-06-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-04-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-02-07-07-2020.jpg
  • Business shop front for a payday loans company at night in the Kings Heath area of Birmingham, United Kingdom. Kings Heath is a suburb of Birmingham, three miles south of the city centre. It is the next suburb south from Moseley.
    20181128_kings heath shops night_003.jpg
  • Sign for the loans brand H&T Pawnbrokers in Birmingham, United Kingdom.
    20180704_brands h&t pawnbrokers_002.jpg
  • Sign for the loans brand H&T Pawnbrokers in Birmingham, United Kingdom.
    20180704_brands h&t pawnbrokers_001.jpg
  • An animal rights activist from Animal Rebellion strikes a pinata suspended from above a branch of Barclays Bank in Tottenham Court Road during a protest on 4 September 2020 in London, United Kingdom. Animal Rebellion were protesting against the provision by Barclays Bank of loans and underwriting to beef and dairy companies which are huge contributors to climate change.
    MK-20200904-Animal-Rebellion-Anti-Ba...jpg
  • An animal rights activist from Animal Rebellion suspends a pinata from above a branch of Barclays Bank in Tottenham Court Road during a protest on 4 September 2020 in London, United Kingdom. Animal Rebellion were protesting against the provision by Barclays Bank of loans and underwriting to beef and dairy companies which are huge contributors to climate change.
    MK-20200904-Animal-Rebellion-Anti-Ba...jpg
  • Animal rights activists from Animal Rebellion protest outside a branch of Barclays Bank in Tottenham Court Road on 4 September 2020 in London, United Kingdom. The activists, who suspended a pinata from above the branch of the bank, were protesting against the provision by Barclays Bank of loans and underwriting to beef and dairy companies which are huge contributors to climate change.
    MK-20200904-Animal-Rebellion-Anti-Ba...jpg
  • An animal rights activist from Animal Rebellion suspends a pinata from above a branch of Barclays Bank in Tottenham Court Road during a protest on 4 September 2020 in London, United Kingdom. Animal Rebellion were protesting against the provision by Barclays Bank of loans and underwriting to beef and dairy companies which are huge contributors to climate change.
    MK-20200904-Animal-Rebellion-Anti-Ba...jpg
  • The UK government has announced a Coronavirus pandemic financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England which is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But venues such as Cameron Mackintoshs Gieldgud Theatre on Shaftesbury Avenue in Londons West End Theatreland, will remain closed for the foreseeable future, on 6th July 2020, in London, England. The arts industry supports 137,250 jobs and is worth £21.2bn in direct turnover.
    coronavirus_WestEnd-10-06-07-2020.jpg
  • The UK government has announced a Coronavirus pandemic financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England which is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But venues such as Cameron Mackintoshs Gieldgud Theatre on Shaftesbury Avenue in Londons West End Theatreland, will remain closed for the foreseeable future, on 6th July 2020, in London, England. The arts industry supports 137,250 jobs and is worth £21.2bn in direct turnover.
    coronavirus_WestEnd-09-06-07-2020.jpg
  • The UK government has announced a Coronavirus pandemic financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England which is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But venues such as The Apollo Theatre on Shaftesbury Avenue in Londons West End Theatreland, where the musical Jamie was abandoned at the beginning of lockdown, will remain closed for the foreseeable future, on 6th July 2020, in London, England. Some theatres in London and others around the country have been wrapped in bright pink barrier tape, which reads Missing Live Theatre -  a protest project led by stage designers group Scene Change highlighting the closure of the arts and culture arts industry supports 137,250 jobs and is worth £21.2bn in direct turnover.
    coronavirus_WestEnd-02-06-07-2020.jpg
  • The UK government has announced a Coronavirus pandemic financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England which is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But venues such as The Apollo Theatre on Shaftesbury Avenue in Londons West End Theatreland, where the musical Jamie was abandoned at the beginning of lockdown, will remain closed for the foreseeable future, on 6th July 2020, in London, England. Some theatres in London and others around the country have been wrapped in bright pink barrier tape, which reads Missing Live Theatre -  a protest project led by stage designers group Scene Change highlighting the closure of the arts and culture arts industry supports 137,250 jobs and is worth £21.2bn in direct turnover.
    coronavirus_WestEnd-08-06-07-2020.jpg
  • The UK government has announced a Coronavirus pandemic financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England which is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But venues such as The Apollo Theatre on Shaftesbury Avenue in Londons West End Theatreland, where the musical Jamie was abandoned at the beginning of lockdown, will remain closed for the foreseeable future, on 6th July 2020, in London, England. Some theatres in London and others around the country have been wrapped in bright pink barrier tape, which reads Missing Live Theatre -  a protest project led by stage designers group Scene Change highlighting the closure of the arts and culture arts industry supports 137,250 jobs and is worth £21.2bn in direct turnover.
    coronavirus_WestEnd-06-06-07-2020.jpg
  • The UK government has announced a Coronavirus pandemic financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England which is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But venues such as The Apollo Theatre on Shaftesbury Avenue in Londons West End Theatreland, where the musical Jamie was abandoned at the beginning of lockdown, will remain closed for the foreseeable future, on 6th July 2020, in London, England. Some theatres in London and others around the country have been wrapped in bright pink barrier tape, which reads Missing Live Theatre -  a protest project led by stage designers group Scene Change highlighting the closure of the arts and culture arts industry supports 137,250 jobs and is worth £21.2bn in direct turnover.
    coronavirus_WestEnd-07-06-07-2020.jpg
  • The UK government has announced a Coronavirus pandemic financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England which is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But venues such as The Apollo Theatre on Shaftesbury Avenue in Londons West End Theatreland, where the musical Jamie was abandoned at the beginning of lockdown, will remain closed for the foreseeable future, on 6th July 2020, in London, England. Some theatres in London and others around the country have been wrapped in bright pink barrier tape, which reads Missing Live Theatre -  a protest project led by stage designers group Scene Change highlighting the closure of the arts and culture arts industry supports 137,250 jobs and is worth £21.2bn in direct turnover.
    coronavirus_WestEnd-05-06-07-2020.jpg
  • The UK government has announced a Coronavirus pandemic financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England which is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But venues such as The Apollo Theatre on Shaftesbury Avenue in Londons West End Theatreland, where the musical Jamie was abandoned at the beginning of lockdown, will remain closed for the foreseeable future, on 6th July 2020, in London, England. Some theatres in London and others around the country have been wrapped in bright pink barrier tape, which reads Missing Live Theatre -  a protest project led by stage designers group Scene Change highlighting the closure of the arts and culture arts industry supports 137,250 jobs and is worth £21.2bn in direct turnover.
    coronavirus_WestEnd-03-06-07-2020.jpg
  • The UK government has announced a Coronavirus pandemic financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England which is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But venues such as The Old Vic theatre in Waterloo will remain for the foreseeable future, on 6th July 2020, in London, England. Some theatres in London and others around the country have been wrapped in bright pink barrier tape, which reads Missing Live Theatre -  a protest project led by stage designers group Scene Change. The arts and culture arts industry supports 137,250 jobs and is worth £21.2bn in direct turnover.
    coronavirus_OldVic-03-06-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-24-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-23-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-20-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-14-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-22-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-15-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-16-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-19-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-12-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-09-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-10-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-07-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-01-07-07-2020.jpg
  • Sign for the loans and pawnbroking services brand The Money Shop in Birmingham, United Kingdom.
    20180704_brands the money shop_002.jpg
  • Sign for the loans and pawnbroking services brand The Money Shop in Birmingham, United Kingdom.
    20180704_brands the money shop_001.jpg
  • Sign for the loans and pawnbroking services brand The Money Shop in Birmingham, United Kingdom.
    20180704_brands the money shop_004.jpg
  • Sign for the loans and pawnbroking services brand The Money Shop in Birmingham, United Kingdom.
    20180704_brands the money shop_003.jpg
  • Sign for the affordable loans company Street UK in Birmingham, United Kingdom. Community interest company providing flexible, short term personal loans.
    20180704_brands street uk_001.jpg
  • Sign for the affordable loans company Street UK in Birmingham, United Kingdom. Community interest company providing flexible, short term personal loans.
    20180704_brands street uk_002.jpg
  • Money shop in central Birmingham, United Kingdom. The Money Shop offers a range of services including foreign exchange, short term loans and pawnbroking.
    20170518_shopping district birmingha...jpg
  • Pocket Money Loans for kids, Shangri La field, Glastonbury Festival 2016. The shop is an exhibition designed to draw attention to the way the consumer credit industry preys on the vulnerable and targets children with marketing.<br />
The project’s aim, artist Darren Cullen says, is to “take our consumer debt culture to its logical conclusion.”<br />
The Glastonbury Festival is the largest greenfield festival in the world, and is now attended by around 175,000 people. Its a five-day music festival that takes place near Pilton, Somerset, United Kingdom. In addition to contemporary music, the festival hosts dance, comedy, theatre, circus, cabaret, and other arts. Held at Worthy Farm in Pilton, leading pop and rock artists have headlined, alongside thousands of others appearing on smaller stages and performance areas.
    _F3A4068_1.jpg
  • Faisel Rahman, Managing Director of Fair Finance. Fair Finance is a leading provider of personal loans and debt advice in London. Through its offices located across London, Fair Finance provides personal loans of up to £2,000 and debt advice to over‐indebted individuals.
    Faisel 11_1.jpg
  • Faisel Rahman, Managing Director of Fair Finance. Fair Finance is a leading provider of personal loans and debt advice in London. Through its offices located across London, Fair Finance provides personal loans of up to £2,000 and debt advice to over‐indebted individuals.
    Faisel 09_1.jpg
  • Faisel Rahman, Managing Director of Fair Finance. Fair Finance is a leading provider of personal loans and debt advice in London. Through its offices located across London, Fair Finance provides personal loans of up to £2,000 and debt advice to over‐indebted individuals.
    Faisel 07_1.jpg
  • Faisel Rahman, Managing Director of Fair Finance. Fair Finance is a leading provider of personal loans and debt advice in London. Through its offices located across London, Fair Finance provides personal loans of up to £2,000 and debt advice to over‐indebted individuals.
    Faisel 04_1.jpg
  • Faisel Rahman, Managing Director of Fair Finance. Fair Finance is a leading provider of personal loans and debt advice in London. Through its offices located across London, Fair Finance provides personal loans of up to £2,000 and debt advice to over‐indebted individuals.
    Faisel 03_1.jpg
  • A group of women chat outside the offices of Micro Start in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso. Micro Start is a project that helps organise credit and loans for women to start up their own small businesses.
    06-micro_9971.jpg
  • Women at the Micro Start office in Boussa, Burkina Faso, pay back their bank loans at the main office cash desk. Micro Start is a project, now in Ouagadougou, that helps organise credit and loans for women to start up their own small businesses.
    06-micro_9961.jpg
  • A cyclist throws a library book into a book drop-off box outside Shoe Lane Library during the Coronavirus pandemic in the City of London, the capitals financial district, on 6th August 2020, in London, England.
    city_people15-06-08-2020.jpg
  • Beneath the sculpture by Turner Prize-winning artist Mark Wallinger entitled The World Turned Upside Down, new graduates straight after their graduation ceremonies meet family and friends outside the London School of Economics LSE, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England. The World Turned Upside Down is a large political globe, four metres in diameter, with nation states and borders outlined but with the simple and revolutionary twist of being inverted. Most of the landmasses now lie in the ‘bottom’ hemisphere with the countries and cities re-labelled for this new orientation.
    LSE_graduates-24-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Beneath the sculpture by Turner Prize-winning artist Mark Wallinger entitled The World Turned Upside Down, new graduates straight after their graduation ceremonies meet family and friends outside the London School of Economics LSE, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England. The World Turned Upside Down is a large political globe, four metres in diameter, with nation states and borders outlined but with the simple and revolutionary twist of being inverted. Most of the landmasses now lie in the ‘bottom’ hemisphere with the countries and cities re-labelled for this new orientation.
    LSE_graduates-26-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Hillary Chung, a 21 year-old Law graduate from Hong Kong, celebrates her graduation with a 2:1 degree outside the London School of Economics LSE after her graduation ceremony, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England.
    LSE_graduates-15-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Hillary Chung, a 21 year-old Law graduate from Hong Kong, celebrates her graduation with a 2:1 degree outside the London School of Economics LSE after her graduation ceremony, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England.
    LSE_graduates-17-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Beneath the sculpture by Turner Prize-winning artist Mark Wallinger entitled The World Turned Upside Down, new graduates straight after their graduation ceremonies meet family and friends outside the London School of Economics LSE, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England. The World Turned Upside Down is a large political globe, four metres in diameter, with nation states and borders outlined but with the simple and revolutionary twist of being inverted. Most of the landmasses now lie in the ‘bottom’ hemisphere with the countries and cities re-labelled for this new orientation.
    LSE_graduates-02-22-07-2019.jpg
  • People looking into the window of H&T Pawnbrokers out and about visiting the shops in the City Centre as tier three / very high alert level of the Coronavirus tier system continues during the run up to Christmas on 14th December 2020 in Birmingham, United Kingdom. After 9 months of lockdown in various forms, people are used to navigating the rules of shopping safely as all non-essential shops try to increase their takings and onwards to the national economy.
    20201214_covid shoppers birmingham_0...jpg
  • Two young men talk on a wall near the faces of past alumni a wall outside King's College London University on the Strand, during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic, and when the capital is designated by the government as a Tier 2 restriction, on 20th October 2020, in London, England.
    university_alumni01-20-10-2020.jpg
  • Immediately after their graduation ceremonies, new graduates meet relatives and family outside the London School of Economics LSE, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England.
    LSE_graduates-32-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Beneath the sculpture by Turner Prize-winning artist Mark Wallinger entitled The World Turned Upside Down, new graduates straight after their graduation ceremonies meet family and friends outside the London School of Economics LSE, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England. The World Turned Upside Down is a large political globe, four metres in diameter, with nation states and borders outlined but with the simple and revolutionary twist of being inverted. Most of the landmasses now lie in the ‘bottom’ hemisphere with the countries and cities re-labelled for this new orientation.
    LSE_graduates-31-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Immediately after their graduation ceremonies, new graduates meet relatives and family outside the London School of Economics LSE, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England.
    LSE_graduates-28-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Immediately after their graduation ceremonies, new graduates meet relatives and family outside the London School of Economics LSE, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England.
    LSE_graduates-27-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Beneath the sculpture by Turner Prize-winning artist Mark Wallinger entitled The World Turned Upside Down, new graduates straight after their graduation ceremonies meet family and friends outside the London School of Economics LSE, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England. The World Turned Upside Down is a large political globe, four metres in diameter, with nation states and borders outlined but with the simple and revolutionary twist of being inverted. Most of the landmasses now lie in the ‘bottom’ hemisphere with the countries and cities re-labelled for this new orientation.
    LSE_graduates-20-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Beneath the sculpture by Turner Prize-winning artist Mark Wallinger entitled The World Turned Upside Down, new graduates straight after their graduation ceremonies meet family and friends outside the London School of Economics LSE, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England. The World Turned Upside Down is a large political globe, four metres in diameter, with nation states and borders outlined but with the simple and revolutionary twist of being inverted. Most of the landmasses now lie in the ‘bottom’ hemisphere with the countries and cities re-labelled for this new orientation.
    LSE_graduates-23-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Beneath the sculpture by Turner Prize-winning artist Mark Wallinger entitled The World Turned Upside Down, new graduates straight after their graduation ceremonies meet family and friends outside the London School of Economics LSE, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England. The World Turned Upside Down is a large political globe, four metres in diameter, with nation states and borders outlined but with the simple and revolutionary twist of being inverted. Most of the landmasses now lie in the ‘bottom’ hemisphere with the countries and cities re-labelled for this new orientation.
    LSE_graduates-22-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Friends and family of Hillary Chung,, a 21 year-old Law graduate from Hong Kong, celebrate her graduation with a 2:1 degree outside the London School of Economics LSE after her graduation ceremony, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England.
    LSE_graduates-12-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Friends and family of Hillary Chung, a 21 year-old Law graduate from Hong Kong, celebrate her graduation with a 2:1 degree outside the London School of Economics LSE after her graduation ceremony, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England.
    LSE_graduates-11-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Friends and family of Hillary Chung, a 21 year-old Law graduate from Hong Kong, celebrate her graduation with a 2:1 degree outside the London School of Economics LSE after her graduation ceremony, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England.
    LSE_graduates-07-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Beneath the sculpture by Turner Prize-winning artist Mark Wallinger entitled The World Turned Upside Down, new graduates straight after their graduation ceremonies meet family and friends outside the London School of Economics LSE, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England. The World Turned Upside Down is a large political globe, four metres in diameter, with nation states and borders outlined but with the simple and revolutionary twist of being inverted. Most of the landmasses now lie in the ‘bottom’ hemisphere with the countries and cities re-labelled for this new orientation.
    LSE_graduates-03-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Friends and family of Hillary Chung, a 21 year-old Law graduate from Hong Kong, celebrate her graduation with a 2:1 degree outside the London School of Economics LSE after her graduation ceremony, on 22nd July 2019, in London, England.
    LSE_graduates-10-22-07-2019.jpg
  • Emma and Martin are a young professional couple living in the experimental community village of Poundbury, Dorset, England. Sitting in their landscaped rear garden the married couple have their portrait taken against a high concrete wall that serves as their property's back boundary. The roofs of neighbouring homes appear over this partition and young tree saplings are fastened to a stake. Poundbury is the visionary model village that the Charles, Prince of Wales sought to develop in 1993 as a successful and pioneering town near Dorchester, built on land owned by his own Duchy of Cornwall, challenging otherwise poor post-war trends in town planning and to some extent following the New Urbanism concept from the US except that the design influences are European.
    poundbury02-07-06_2003.jpg
  • As if about to be crunched underfoot, shattered glass from the windows of offices in the historic City of London side-street, stickers and notices for Access (Mastercard) and American Express (Amex) credit cards lie on the disaster-strewn pavement (sidewalk). This is some of the debris lying about after the huge Bishopsgate bomb on 24th April 1993, London's most expensive terrorist atrocity during the Provisional Irish Republican Army's (IRA) sustained bombings on the British mainland. Buildings up to 500 metres away were damaged, with one and a half million square feet (140,000 sq m) of office space being affected and over 500 tonnes of glass broken. Costs of repairing the damage was estimated at £350 million and was possibly the IRA's most successful military tactic since the start of what was called the Troubles from 1969 onwards.
    credit_crunch01-24-04-1993_1.jpg
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