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  • Looking across Bank Triangle, we look up towards the Bank of England and the pillars of Cornhill. It is later afternoon and winter light is striking the architecture of this famous London landmark. Ahead are the converging columns of the famous Bank of England and to the right Cornhill Exchange at Bank Triangle in the City Of London, the financial district, otherwise known as the Square Mile. This perspective of suggests a bank and its architecture looking powerful and influential in the UK's economy. The pillars give a sense of establishment, a scene of classic stability and strength.
    bank_of_england01-21-01-2011_1.jpg
  • International tourists including one Chinese man dressed in a very traditonal English suit and hat standing looking up and taking pictures of the Fortnum & Mason clock on Piccadilly in London, England, United Kingdom. The clock was added to the front of the Piccadilly building in 1964, and the two men represent the stores founders, Mr Fortnum and Mr Mason, who appear once an hour.
    20160214_fortnum and mason clock tou...jpg
  • International tourists including one Chinese man dressed in a very traditonal English suit and hat standing looking up and taking pictures of the Fortnum & Mason clock on Piccadilly in London, England, United Kingdom. The clock was added to the front of the Piccadilly building in 1964, and the two men represent the stores founders, Mr Fortnum and Mr Mason, who appear once an hour.
    20160214_fortnum and mason clock tou...jpg
  • International tourists standing looking up and taking pictures of the Fortnum & Mason clock on Piccadilly in London, England, United Kingdom. The clock was added to the front of the Piccadilly building in 1964, and the two men represent the stores founders, Mr Fortnum and Mr Mason, who appear once an hour.
    20160214_fortnum and mason clock tou...jpg
  • We are looking upwards into the faces of two surgeons wearing medical masks and surgical gowns as they carry out a wisdom tooth extraction procedure at the famous St. Bartholomews (Barts) Hospital in London, England. With eyes focussed on their work, the two health professionals are intently looking into the mouth of their patient who is covered in clean green sheets but remains unseen to the viewer. Strong operating theatre lights shine down on to the patient and we see the men's gloved hands reaching carefully, avoiding infection or bacterial problems like MRSA. Barts is Britain’s oldest hospital – founded in 1123 - and boasts a progressive policy of encouraging day-surgery for out-patients allowing patients to return home soon after their minor operations.
    city_london07-15-12-2007_1.jpg
  • Looking upwards towards a memorial that commemorates the dead from the First World War of 1914-18 between the converging pillars of the Cornhill Exchange building and beyond, to the famous Bank of England in the City Of London, the financial district, otherwise known as the Square Mile. It is early evening as the ambient light fades while artificial illumination becomes the dominant light-source. With such a wide-angle perspective the bank and its architecture looks powerful and influential in the UK's economy. The dark pillars contrasting with the colourful (colorful) light emitted from this established Bank makes for a scene of stability and strength against the pity and tragedy of a past conflict that claimed millions of lives.
    bank_triangle01-04-20-1997_1.jpg
  • London, UK. Thursday 5th September 2013. City workers looking up into the light. Urgent action in planned to “cover up” the Walkie Talkie skyscraper in the City after sunlight reflected from the building melted a car on the streets below. Temperatures have been measured in excess of 50 degrees C, and as much as 70 degrees at it's peak. The 525ft building has been renamed the “Walkie Scorchie” after its distinctive concave surfaces reflected a dazzling beam of light which has caused extensive damage to nearby buildings.
    20130905_walkie scorchie city boys_F.jpg
  • London, UK. Thursday 5th September 2013. City workers looking up into the light. Urgent action in planned to “cover up” the Walkie Talkie skyscraper in the City after sunlight reflected from the building melted a car on the streets below. Temperatures have been measured in excess of 50 degrees C, and as much as 70 degrees at it's peak. The 525ft building has been renamed the “Walkie Scorchie” after its distinctive concave surfaces reflected a dazzling beam of light which has caused extensive damage to nearby buildings.
    20130905_walkie scorchie city boys_C.jpg
  • We are looking up from the ground to crowds gathered in three levels of a multi-story car park to await athletes pass during the London Marathon. The runners will make their way through the streets of East London beneath these spectators who have been patiently waiting for their friends and families to pass below. It is a great viewpoint from which to view such a sporting spectacle and we are peering up at the supporters leaning against the discoloured (discolored) concrete architecture dating back to the 1970s. It is the best elevated place to witness the race. There are three rows of 5 columns totalling 15 seperate windows and each one is full of families young and old. They resemble the compartments of a garden pet hutch where rabbits are kept in cramped conditions.
    RB-0136.jpg
  • London, UK. Thursday 5th September 2013. City workers looking up into the light. Urgent action in planned to “cover up” the Walkie Talkie skyscraper in the City after sunlight reflected from the building melted a car on the streets below. Temperatures have been measured in excess of 50 degrees C, and as much as 70 degrees at it's peak. The 525ft building has been renamed the “Walkie Scorchie” after its distinctive concave surfaces reflected a dazzling beam of light which has caused extensive damage to nearby buildings.
    20130905_walkie scorchie city boys_D.jpg
  • London, UK. Thursday 5th September 2013. City workers looking up into the light. Urgent action in planned to “cover up” the Walkie Talkie skyscraper in the City after sunlight reflected from the building melted a car on the streets below. Temperatures have been measured in excess of 50 degrees C, and as much as 70 degrees at it's peak. The 525ft building has been renamed the “Walkie Scorchie” after its distinctive concave surfaces reflected a dazzling beam of light which has caused extensive damage to nearby buildings.
    20130905_walkie scorchie city boys_B.jpg
  • We are looking up from below at the classic neo-Romanesque architecture of the Royal Exchange building in the City Of London, the financial district, otherwise known as the Square Mile. At the top of Doric and Ionic columns with their ornate stonework, powerfully strong lintels cross, bearing the load of fine artistry and carvings which feature the design by Sir William Tite in 1842-1844 and opened in 1844 by Queen Victoria whose name is written in Latin (Victoriae R). It’s the third building of the kind erected on the same site. The first Exchange erected in 1564-70 by sir Thomas Gresham but was destroyed in the great fire of 1666. It’s successor, by Jarman, was also burned down in 1838. The present building is grade 1 listed and cost about £150,000.
    london_architecture01-04-06-1997.jpg
  • Looking upwards towards the back of a number 8 red London bus which passes the pillars of the famous Bank of England building at Cornhill in the City Of London, the financial district, otherwise known as the Square Mile. We see the Bank rising as an imposing classical structure. Its columns are converging because of wide-angle lens-distortion, giving us the image of strength, stability and influence in UK economics. The bus is a traditional design called a Routemaster which has been in service on the capital's roads since 1954 and is nowadays only seen on heritage routes. Its distinctive rounded rear bodywork is easily recognisable as that classic British icon.
    RB-0037.jpg
  • A couple of shoppers look skywards to see the progress of the Centre Point tower at the corner of Tottenham Court Road and Oxford Street, on 12th December 2017, in London England.
    london_people-04-12-12-2017.jpg
  • London, UK. Thursday 5th September 2013. City workers looking up into the light. Urgent action in planned to “cover up” the Walkie Talkie skyscraper in the City after sunlight reflected from the building melted a car on the streets below. Temperatures have been measured in excess of 50 degrees C, and as much as 70 degrees at it's peak. The 525ft building has been renamed the “Walkie Scorchie” after its distinctive concave surfaces reflected a dazzling beam of light which has caused extensive damage to nearby buildings.
    20130905_walkie scorchie looking up_...jpg
  • London, UK. Thursday 5th September 2013. City workers looking up into the light. Urgent action in planned to “cover up” the Walkie Talkie skyscraper in the City after sunlight reflected from the building melted a car on the streets below. Temperatures have been measured in excess of 50 degrees C, and as much as 70 degrees at it's peak. The 525ft building has been renamed the “Walkie Scorchie” after its distinctive concave surfaces reflected a dazzling beam of light which has caused extensive damage to nearby buildings.
    20130905_walkie scorchie looking up_...jpg
  • Looking up at the Shard skyscraper and local architecture in Southwark, central London. From the top deck of a London bus, we look out through the window and up to see the tall buildings, new to the landscape of London Bridge. The skyscraper landmark known as The Shard in the capital was completed in May 2012. It is the tallest building in the European Union. The 46th-tallest building in the world, standing 310 m (1,017 ft) tall, it is also be the second-tallest free-standing structure in the UK. Several Qatari investors funded the construction of the tower via Islamic finance.
    shard_sky01-09-12-2015_1.jpg
  • Two assessors inspect damage to buildings after the IRA Bishopsgate bomb in the City of London. They stand on a junction looking up at buildings whose windows were blown out by the force of this notorious blast that shook London’s financial district. The Irish Republican Army (IRA) exploded a truck bomb on Bishopsgate. Buildings up to 500 metres away were damaged with one and a half million square feet (140,000 m) of office space being affected and over 500 tonnes of glass broken. Repair costs reached approx £350 million. It was said that Roman remains could be viewed at the bottom of the pit the bomb created. One person was killed when the one ton fertiliser bomb detonated directly outside the medieval St Ethelburga's church.
    city_assessors-26-04-1993_1.jpg
  • Spectators lie on the ground or look up to experience the art instillation by French artist Philippe Parreno, an experience of sound and light, in the Turbine Hall of Tate Modern, on 6th October 2016, in London, England.
    tate_modern-01-06-10-2016.jpg
  • Red circular sign telling shoppers that supermarket is open 24 hours a day and night. Looking up from below from the retail car park, we see the round sign in late afternoon winter sunlight. The warehouse walls rise up in a powerful and influential angle and show the large numbers saying 24 and in letter the word hours in lower-case. The Sunday Trading Act 1994 is an Act of Parliament in the United Kingdom governing the right of shops in England and Wales to trade on a Sunday. Buying and selling on Sunday had previously been illegal, with exceptions, under the Shops Act 1950. Large retail park shops usually open 11am-5pm, with supermarkets more usually choosing 10am-4pm.
    24_hours02-16-10-2010_1.jpg
  • Quality residential tower architecture in Southwark, south London. Looking up from street level, we see the Ernst Building at 142 Union Street in London SE1. Typical prices for 1 bed apartments are £600,000 and over. Modern architecture be Forge architects is seen rising up to blue sky in central London.
    tower_housing 01-18-02-2015_1.jpg
  • Businessmen walk along St. Mary Axe street in the City of London, the capitals financial district, on 10th May 2019, in London, England.
    city_people-02-10-05-2019.jpg
  • Queueing spectators wait to enter the grounds of the All England Lawn Tennis Club during the Wimbledon tennis championships, on 3rd July 2017, in Wimbledon, London, England.
    wimbledon-07-03-07-2017.jpg
  • Beneath Romanesque architecture of the Palais de Justice is modern solar panel technology on 17th June 2016, in Montpellier, France. Looking up at the heritage buildings of this provincial French town, with their pillars and columns from another era, along with ornate street lighting.
    montpellier-01-17-06-2016.jpg
  • British flags hang along Londons Regent Street with the London Underground sign at its Piccadilly Circus station on 7th June 2016. The angle is looking up at the curved architecture created by John Nash in the 18th century but which still dominates the capitals West End known for luxury consumer brands. Regent Street is named after the Prince Regent later George IV and associated with architect Nash, whose street layout survives. The street was completed in 1825 and was an early example of town planning in England, cutting through the 17th and 18th century street pattern through which it passes.
    regent_street-04-07-06-2016.jpg
  • Rising circular fairground ride with EU member flags and Millennium (ferris) Wheel on London's Southbank. Looking up from the ground, we see the theme of circles and silhouettes in an afternoon sky as fearless people on these rides enjoy the scary sensation of flying through the air. Flags of European nations fly from each gondola. The Eye, or as it was known in 2000, the Millennium Wheel, was designed by architects David Blian, Julia Barfield, Malcolm Cook, Mark Sparrowhawk, Steven Chilton and Nic Bailey, and carries 32 sealed, air-conditioned passenger capsules which rotate at 0.26 metres (0.85 feet) per second (about 0.9 km/h or 0.5 mph) so that one revolution takes about 30 minutes.
    fairground_ride35-16-09-2014_1.jpg
  • Rising circular fairground ride with EU member flags and Millennium (ferris) Wheel on London's Southbank. Looking up from the ground, we see the theme of circles and silhouettes in an afternoon sky as fearless people on these rides enjoy the scary sensation of flying through the air. Flags of European nations fly from each gondola. The Eye, or as it was known in 2000, the Millennium Wheel, was designed by architects David Blian, Julia Barfield, Malcolm Cook, Mark Sparrowhawk, Steven Chilton and Nic Bailey, and carries 32 sealed, air-conditioned passenger capsules which rotate at 0.26 metres (0.85 feet) per second (about 0.9 km/h or 0.5 mph) so that one revolution takes about 30 minutes.
    fairground_ride28-16-09-2014_1.jpg
  • Rising circular fairground ride with EU member flags and Millennium (ferris) Wheel on London's Southbank. Looking up from the ground, we see the theme of circles and silhouettes in an afternoon sky as fearless people on these rides enjoy the scary sensation of flying through the air. Flags of European nations fly from each gondola. The Eye, or as it was known in 2000, the Millennium Wheel, was designed by architects David Blian, Julia Barfield, Malcolm Cook, Mark Sparrowhawk, Steven Chilton and Nic Bailey, and carries 32 sealed, air-conditioned passenger capsules which rotate at 0.26 metres (0.85 feet) per second (about 0.9 km/h or 0.5 mph) so that one revolution takes about 30 minutes.
    fairground_ride27-16-09-2014_1.jpg
  • Cranes and blue sky on a large construction site at Broadgate development in the City of London. Looking up from a low angle, we see just two clouds in an otherwise blue sky, with four of the project's cranes reaching upwards, the reinforced concrete lift shaft of a new building rising fast and a completed block on the left. Broadgate is a large, 32-acre (13 ha) office and retail estate in the City of London, owned by British Land and the Blackstone Group and managed by Broadgate Estates. The original developer was Rosehaugh: it was built by a Bovis / Tarmac Construction joint venture
    city_cranes02-17-12-2012_1.jpg
  • The French national flag flies on top of the 17th century Arc de Triomphe, with a traffic sign showing priority for one direction, on 17th June 2016, in Montpellier, France. Looking up at the Romanesque arch, built to honour King Louis XIV where once stood ancient ramparts, is now the entrance to the inner city of this provincial town.
    montpellier-03-17-06-2016.jpg
  • Rising circular fairground ride with EU member flags and Millennium (ferris) Wheel on London's Southbank. Looking up from the ground, we see the theme of circles and silhouettes in an afternoon sky as fearless people on these rides enjoy the scary sensation of flying through the air. Flags of European nations fly from each gondola. The Eye, or as it was known in 2000, the Millennium Wheel, was designed by architects David Blian, Julia Barfield, Malcolm Cook, Mark Sparrowhawk, Steven Chilton and Nic Bailey, and carries 32 sealed, air-conditioned passenger capsules which rotate at 0.26 metres (0.85 feet) per second (about 0.9 km/h or 0.5 mph) so that one revolution takes about 30 minutes.
    fairground_ride20-15-09-2014_1.jpg
  • Rising circular fairground ride with EU member flags and Millennium (ferris) Wheel on London's Southbank. Looking up from the ground, we see the theme of circles and silhouettes in an afternoon sky as fearless people on these rides enjoy the scary sensation of flying through the air. Flags of European nations fly from each gondola. The Eye, or as it was known in 2000, the Millennium Wheel, was designed by architects David Blian, Julia Barfield, Malcolm Cook, Mark Sparrowhawk, Steven Chilton and Nic Bailey, and carries 32 sealed, air-conditioned passenger capsules which rotate at 0.26 metres (0.85 feet) per second (about 0.9 km/h or 0.5 mph) so that one revolution takes about 30 minutes.
    fairground_ride18-15-09-2014_1.jpg
  • Rising circular fairground ride with EU member flags and Millennium (ferris) Wheel on London's Southbank. Looking up from the ground, we see the theme of circles and silhouettes in an afternoon sky as fearless people on these rides enjoy the scary sensation of flying through the air. Flags of European nations fly from each gondola. The Eye, or as it was known in 2000, the Millennium Wheel, was designed by architects David Blian, Julia Barfield, Malcolm Cook, Mark Sparrowhawk, Steven Chilton and Nic Bailey, and carries 32 sealed, air-conditioned passenger capsules which rotate at 0.26 metres (0.85 feet) per second (about 0.9 km/h or 0.5 mph) so that one revolution takes about 30 minutes.
    fairground_ride17-15-09-2014_1.jpg
  • Looking up at the corporate flag of Apple's logo on a banner high above street level at Regent House (1898) in London's Regent's Street. This Apple Store was the first to be built in Europe and serves as a flagship outlet for the stylish brand of computer accessories that were largely the brainchild of Steve Jobs (1955-2011) who started the company as a student in 1977.
    steveJobs_death1-06-10-2011_1.jpg
  • A missing panel in a street directions sign, frames a businessman on his phone admiring a young woman who looks up at the Monument where the Great Fire of London of 1666 is commemorated exactly 350 years afterwards, on 1st September 2016, in the City of London, England UK.
    city_people-32-01-09-2016_1.jpg
  • A pet Chihuahua dog looks up to its owner whilst walking along the promenade of Ilfracombe, a seaside resort on the north Devon coast, England. Dressed in pink clothing befitting this ‘toy’ species, the pooch spreads it little legs to steady itself, threatened by an approaching stranger and camera. The Chihuahua (Spanish: Chihuahueño) is the smallest breed of dog and is so named for the state of Chihuahua in Mexico. Chihuahuas come in a wide variety of sizes, head shapes, colors and coat lengths. The Chihuahua’s history is puzzling and there are many theories surrounding the origin of the breed. Both folklore and archeological finds show that the breed originated in Mexico. The most common theory and most likely is that Chihuahuas are descended from the Techichi, a companion dog favoured by the Toltec civilization.
    pet_pug2-05-August-2011.jpg
  • RAF fundraisers watch the Red Arrows, Britain's RAF aerobatic team during a private display high above RAF Akrotiri. Spectators at the Princess Margaret Hospital (TPMH) on the Akrotiri peninsula, about 4 kilometres from the RAF Station at Akrotiri, admire the elite 'Red Arrows', Britain's prestigious Royal Air Force aerobatic team, as they perform one of their first public shows of the year. RAF staff and patients are allowed on to the grass outside the hospital building for this free show, given in honour of local charity fund-raisers of the Cyprus-based RAF Association whose guests form one of the smallest crowds to watch a Red Arrows display. Since 1965 the squadron have flown over 4,000 shows in 52 countries and are an important part of Britain's summer events where aerobatics aircraft perform their manoeuvres in front of massed crowds.
    Red_Arrows140_RBA.jpg
  • RAF fundraisers watch the Red Arrows, Britain's RAF aerobatic team during a private display high above RAF Akrotiri. Spectators at the Princess Margaret Hospital (TPMH) on the Akrotiri peninsula, about 4 kilometres from the RAF Station at Akrotiri, admire the elite 'Red Arrows', Britain's prestigious Royal Air Force aerobatic team, as they perform one of their first public shows of the year. RAF staff and patients are allowed on to the grass outside the hospital building for this free show, given in honour of local charity fund-raisers of the Cyprus-based RAF Association whose guests form one of the smallest crowds to watch a Red Arrows display. Since 1965 the squadron have flown over 4,000 shows in 52 countries and are an important part of Britain's summer events where aerobatics aircraft perform their manoeuvres in front of massed crowds.
    Red_Arrows137_RBA.jpg
  • Spectators and their dog watch the Red Arrows, Britain's RAF aerobatic team displaying high above their heads during a public airshow at the Kielder Air Show. Here, the elite 'Red Arrows', Britain's prestigious Royal Air Force aerobatic team, are to perform and the squadron's commentator - known as Red 10 - will be describing the 25-minute routine performed in front of a few hundred people, probably the smallest of the Red Arrows audiences. The Hawk aircraft will be flying over the borderland between England and Scotland during this display which has attracted a local crowd to this pretty landscape.
    Red_Arrows524_RBA.jpg
  • Frank who makes regular long distance call to his family in Ghana in a phone booth of a Long distance call shop, Hackney, London
    02-Frank-ghana.jpg
  • A businesswoman stands seductively over a Victorian-style shoe-shiner in a corner of Leadenhall Market in the City of London. Her black shoe is resting on a small brass plinth for the leather to be buffed up with the help of Kiwi polish and the efficient speed of a good brushing technique with the final stage being a dusting to bring the best reflective shine. Their relationship is that of paying-customer and servant and we look see a sexually-dominant situation where the wealthy-looking lady is standing over the man with her strong leg showing in a provocative manner. Wearing a red uniform and ID, the shoe-shiner is on bended-knees, his weight resting on a soft, red cushion, protection from the cold, hard pavement while looking down, concentrating on the job in hand.
    RB_093-15-04-1993.jpg
  • A businessman stands over a Victorian-style shoe-shiner in a corner of Leadenhall Market in the City of London. His black shoe is resting on a small brass plinth for the leather to be buffed up with the help of Kiwi polish and the efficient speed of a good brushing technique with the final stage being a dusting to bring the best reflective shine. Their relationship is that of paying-customer and servant and we look downwards from the perspective of the wealthier man, a superior view that the client feels when paying for such a service. Wearing a red uniform, the shoe-shiner is on bended-knees, his weight resting on a soft, red cushion, protection from the cold, hard pavement while looking down, concentrating on the job in hand.
    city_london12-15-12-2007 _1.jpg
  • Writer Alison (A L) Kennedy leans against the old Victorian windows of Glasgow's Botanical gardens, in Scotland. Looking serious and rather troubled, she is wearing a worn leather jacket and a tartan scarf, she looks towards the ground during her portrait session for Stern Magazine. A L Kennedy is one of Britain's most respected novelists, dramatist, newspaper columnists and more recently, stand-up comedian after her 2007 performances at the Edinburgh festival. Her books include: Paradise; Indelible Acts; On Bullfighting; Everything You Need; Original Bliss; So I Am Glad; Looking for the Possible Dance;  Night Geometry & the Garscadden Trains; Now That You're back and Life & Death of Colonel Blimp. Born in Dundee on 22nd October 1965, she was educated at Dundee High School 1970 - 1983 & Warwick University 1983 - 86 (BA Hons in Theatre Studies & Drama)
    A_L_Kennedy03-03-09-2007_1.jpg
  • Writer Alison (A L) Kennedy leans against the old Victorian windows of Glasgow's Botanical gardens, in Scotland. Looking serious and rather troubled, she is wearing a worn leather jacket and a tartan scarf, she looks towards the ground during her portrait session for Stern Magazine. A L Kennedy is one of Britain's most respected novelists, dramatist, newspaper columnists and more recently, stand-up comedian after her 2007 performances at the Edinburgh festival. Her books include: Paradise; Indelible Acts; On Bullfighting; Everything You Need; Original Bliss; So I Am Glad; Looking for the Possible Dance;  Night Geometry & the Garscadden Trains; Now That You're back and Life & Death of Colonel Blimp. Born in Dundee on 22nd October 1965, she was educated at Dundee High School 1970 - 1983 & Warwick University 1983 - 86 (BA Hons in Theatre Studies & Drama)
    A_L_Kennedy01-03-09-2007_1.jpg
  • Looking downwards from a high vantage point on a hillside, we see one mountain-biker leading a second cyclist as they traverse across a sunlit mountainside near the hamlet of Masecha in the parish of Triesenberg, Liechtenstein. The late afternoon sun is low across the valley and there is a haze that partly obscures and refracts light over the distant landscape. There is snow on the distant mountain peaks but the countryside has the brown look of a snowless winter. Far off villages and hamlets hug the hillsides and golden light floods the scene. The tiny landlocked Principality of Liechtenstein is bordered by the Alpine countries of Austria and Switzerland and is a winter sports resort, though best known as a tax haven, attracting companies worldwide to register their assets in secrecy.
    RB-0017.jpg
  • A businessman stands over a Victorian-style shoe-shiner in a corner of Leadenhall Market in the City of London. His black shoe is resting on a small brass plinth for the leather to be buffed up with the help of Kiwi polish and the efficient speed of a good brushing technique with the final stage being a dusting to bring the best reflective shine. Their relationship is that of paying-customer and servant and we look downwards from the perspective of the wealthier man, a superior view that the client feels when paying for such a service. Wearing a red uniform, the shoe-shiner is on bended-knees, his weight resting on a soft, red cushion, protection from the cold, hard pavement while looking down, concentrating on the job in hand.
    shoeshiner-15-04-1993_1_1.jpg
  • Young girl watches young smoker at a south London bus stop. As the older girl sits with a cigarette in her fingers, she taps on the phone keypad with blue smoke wafting up. The little girl strands next to her mother tipping up her scooter, looking at the behaviour of the other. Passive smoking can damage your body because secondhand smoke contains more than 4,000 chemicals, many of which are irritants and toxins, and some of which are known to cause cancer.
    bus_stop_people01-18-02-2015_1.jpg
  • Build up of healthy looking green moss on an old wall. London, UK. Mosses are small flowerless plants that usually grow in dense green clumps or mats, in damp or shady locations. The individual plants are usually composed of simple, one-cell thick leaves, covering a thin stem that supports them but does not conduct water and nutrients.
    20150121_moss_B_1.jpg
  • Build up of healthy looking green moss on an old wall. London, UK. Mosses are small flowerless plants that usually grow in dense green clumps or mats, in damp or shady locations. The individual plants are usually composed of simple, one-cell thick leaves, covering a thin stem that supports them but does not conduct water and nutrients.
    20150121_moss_A_1.jpg
  • Pat Marden rreaches up to attend an arch of apples at the East Malling Research, Kent, England that provides science-based plant and food solutions to industry and Government. As a  Horticultural Technician Pat and her colleagues work for this organisation which is the principal UK provider of top-class horticultural research and development for the perennial crops sector. They have for example, genetically fingerprinted all 2300 apples and over 250 pears of the National Fruit Collection and used DNA markers called microsatellites to produce individual profiles for trees. Looking upwards we see Pat balanced on a tapering ladder to reach leaves and branches that form this feature in the laboratory gardens and which has eight similar arches.
    orchard01.jpg
  • Claudia Gilchrist, 16,  is attending a traditional style prom with her boyfriend Steve Drake. A lot of effort is put into looking right for the night. Dresses have been planned all year and boyfriends are expected to wear matching ties. Here we see Claudia getting ready in preparation for the night at the local hotel in Sittingbourne, kent. <br />
In recent years American style prom nights to celebrate graduation from high School have been gaining popularity in the UK. These pictures are part of a set  commissioned for the Times magazine that  look at this teenage rite of passage across three schools in the UK.
    IMG_0339_1.jpg
  • A portrait of three brothers of the same family have their picture taken outside their parents' home in Westcliff, England. The eldest is a teenager of approximately 17 and  is holding his youngest brother who is still only 12 months-old. The third boy is biting his lip while looking to the viewer, more anxiously than the other two. He is possibly 14 but both the elder lads wear identically-designed jumpers that cut across the throat to allow their clean white shirts and ties to remain visible. Apart from the young child, the elders share the same dark hair colour but genetically, they share one chromosome that has given them heavy eyebrows, a family trait. This was taken on Kodachrome film stock in the spring of 1961 so the look and feel of the image is dated with wonderfully muted colours that this Kodak film offered to consumers in the early 60s.
    family_archive2515-03_1961_1.jpg
  • Claudia Gilchrist, 16,  is attending a traditional style prom with her boyfriend Steve Drake. A lot of effort is put into looking right for the night. Dresses have been planned all year and boyfriends are expected to wear matching ties. Here we see Claudia getting ready in preparation for the night at the local hotel in Sittingbourne, kent. <br />
In recent years American style prom nights to celebrate graduation from high School have been gaining popularity in the UK. These pictures are part of a set  commissioned for the Times magazine that  look at this teenage rite of passage across three schools in the UK.
    IMG_0271_1.jpg
  • Claudia Gilchrist, 16,  is attending a traditional style prom with her boyfriend Steve Drake. A lot of effort is put into looking right for the night. Dresses have been planned all year and boyfriends are expected to wear matching ties. Here we see Claudia getting ready in preparation for the night at the local hotel in Sittingbourne, kent. <br />
In recent years American style prom nights to celebrate graduation from high School have been gaining popularity in the UK. These pictures are part of a set  commissioned for the Times magazine that  look at this teenage rite of passage across three schools in the UK.
    IMG_0198_1.jpg
  • Claudia Gilchrist, 16,  is attending a traditional style prom with her boyfriend Steve Drake. A lot of effort is put into looking right for the night. Dresses have been planned all year and boyfriends are expected to wear matching ties. Here we see Claudia getting ready in preparation for the night at the local hotel in Sittingbourne, kent. <br />
In recent years American style prom nights to celebrate graduation from high School have been gaining popularity in the UK. These pictures are part of a set  commissioned for the Times magazine that  look at this teenage rite of passage across three schools in the UK.
    IMG_0172_1.jpg
  • The dress of Claudia Gilchrist, 16. She  is attending a traditional style prom with her boyfriend Steve Drake. A lot of effort is put into looking right for the night. Dresses have been planned all year and boyfriends are expected to wear matching ties. In recent years American style prom nights to celebrate graduation from high School have been gaining popularity in the UK. These pictures are part of a set  commissioned for the Times magazine that  look at this teenage rite of passage across three schools in the UK.
    IMG_0146_1.jpg
  • Standing with a recently-killed deer run-over on a nearby highway, members of a special US Air Force (USAF) survival course (see Corbis image 42-18212808) pose by the gutted carcass of their animal in a forest near their facility at Fairchild AFB, Spokane, Washington State. These tough-looking men host visiting air crew whose flying careers depend on passing this rigorous week of escape and evasion instruction. Should they land in enemy territory for example, they will need all the skills learned here to survive possibly weeks in the wilderness so trapping and preparing fresh meat for human consumption is of paramount importance. Here the teachers stand around the venison which is strung up on a branch, its intestines and organs already removed by a hunting knife. They wear camouflage uniforms, face paint to look vicious, threatening and heartless.
    USAF0206-08_1995_1_1.jpg
  • A young blonde girl of approximately 3 years-old stands on a lawn looking delighted. She giggles with great mirth at something that pleases her - possibly the way her father has posed her as if she's a ballerina, or maybe because it is her birthday and her present is the blue dress she is showing off to the viewer. The girl holds out her arms while holding a special pair of sunglasses. It is the summer of 1967 and this is a housing estate for British soldiers stationed in Bielefeld, Germany still during the Cold War. The girl's father is a solder serving in the British Army and the they all live in a house nearby with other expat families. Kodachrome film has a wonderful magenta colour cast in mid-tones and where a small light-leak has affected the far right, reminiscent of the classic days of early photography when shifts in color gave a faded look.
    family_archive2713-05_1967_1.jpg
  • Looking down from above, we see one lone queuing traveller at Charles de Gaulle, gazes up towards the large Departures board. Fellow-passengers wait by baggage trolleys in a civilised line beneath the information. Charles de Gaulle/Roissy is a hub airport for Air France north of the French capital. The departures information has schedule times, destinations, flight, satellite and gate numbers plus   remarks. Air travellers experience such misery every day and shows of how global air travel has become a routine, mundane and stressful for the everyday airline passenger - a far cry from when commercial flight was purely for the elite. Picture from the 'Plane Pictures' project, a celebration of aviation aesthetics and flying culture, 100 years after the Wright brothers first 12 seconds/120 feet powered flight at Kitty Hawk,1903.
    aviation_corbis29-27-07-2000_1.jpg
  • Employees in a central London office work dilligently alongside the reminders of vacations that colleagues and friends have taken. Picture postcard souvenirs have been lined up as a display of the perfect holiday when they have returned to work to put their shoulders to the grindstone. It is a scene of wishful thinking, of 'wish you were here!' and of looking forward to the next break from the toil of their careers so by showing the idyllic locations of their dreams with these visual reminders, can they imagine the beauty of these places: Tenby in south Wales, the Lake District in northern England and a country hall set in, perhaps, the Scottish  hills. An out of focus worker stares intensely into his PC, perhaps thinking of escapism and a life outside these four walls.
    ernst+young221-09-08-2007_1.jpg
  • Young men high up on the hill look out over the city from the Acropolis of Athens. The main buildings on the Acropolis were built by Pericles in the fifth century BC as a monument to the cultural and political achievements of the inhabitants of Athens. The term acropolis means upper city and many of the city states of ancient Greece are built around an acropolis where the inhabitants can go as a place of refuge in times of invasion. It's for this reason that the most sacred buildings are usually on the acropolis. It's the safest most secure place in town. As little as 150 years ago there were still dwellings on the Acropolis of Athens. Athens is the capital and largest city of Greece. It dominates the Attica periphery and is one of the world's oldest cities, as its recorded history spans around 3,400 years. Classical Athens was a powerful city-state. A centre for the arts, learning and philosophy.
    20110919acropolis of athensY.jpg
  • Young men high up on the hill look out over the city from the Acropolis of Athens. The main buildings on the Acropolis were built by Pericles in the fifth century BC as a monument to the cultural and political achievements of the inhabitants of Athens. The term acropolis means upper city and many of the city states of ancient Greece are built around an acropolis where the inhabitants can go as a place of refuge in times of invasion. It's for this reason that the most sacred buildings are usually on the acropolis. It's the safest most secure place in town. As little as 150 years ago there were still dwellings on the Acropolis of Athens. Athens is the capital and largest city of Greece. It dominates the Attica periphery and is one of the world's oldest cities, as its recorded history spans around 3,400 years. Classical Athens was a powerful city-state. A centre for the arts, learning and philosophy.
    20110919acropolis of athensX.jpg
  • Green busker person walks past schoolchildren with pigeon seemingly perched on shoulder. The person whose face is unseen, walks up the steps in London's Trafalgar Square, about to take up position and entertain the crowds of tourists and kids in winter sunshine. The kids look on with interest as they eat lunch, crouched on the steps at this famous landmark. The costume appears to be shiny plastic and the false perspective confuses us with the bird on the shoulder.
    green_man01-13-02-2014.jpg
  • A young woman wearing headphones walks beneath a large female model's face advertising Nike's Tech Fleeces. We look from a low angle, up at the large model's face who watches us with a steady gaze from under her hood. Below her is a young woman wearing a hat and earphones, walking underneath the epitome of beauty and modern style.
    london_shoppers04-15-09-2015.jpg
  • An elderly man on an escalator looks back in a ray of light. The escalator brings people down the steep hill in Mid-levels and up the rest of the day and night. 7 million people live on 1,104km square, making it Hong Kong the most vertical city in the world.
    _MG_3747_1.jpg
  • City workers look through corrugates sheeting at damage caused by the IRA Bishopsgate bomb in the City of London. Two days after the Irish Republican Army (IRA) exploded a truck bomb on Bishopsgate, a main arterial road that travels north-south through London's financial area, City of London three on-lookers stop to view damage to the tall HSBC building. It was said that Roman remains could be viewed at the bottom of the pit the bomb created. One person was killed when the one ton fertiliser bomb detonated directly outside the medieval St Ethelburga's church. Buildings up to 500 metres away were damaged, with one and a half million square feet (140,000 m) of office space being affected and over 500 tonnes of glass broken. repair costs reached approx £350 million.
    corrugated_men01-26-04-1993_1.jpg
  • A giant eye from a construction site hoarding watches street next to a workman up a ladder on Neal Street, London. The workman stands on top of the hoarding structure and attends to a detail in the shop's frontage, equipped with tools that hang from his belt. Below him is the large-scale face being covered by the model's hand and whose fingers are open wide across his right eye. His left is seen gazing across the city - almost an Orwellian scenario of the writer's 'Big Brother' story from 1984.
    eye_workman01-22-09-2010 12-43-43_1.jpg
  • A pedestrian distracted with his mobile phone walks past a broken warning construction work figure - one of many up and down both sides of the Tottenham Court Road, warns pedestrians of a change of road layout, from one-way to two-way traffic, on 7th May 2019, in London, England.
    both_ways-09-07-05-2019.jpg
  • Heathrow airport's NATS Air Traffic Control tower, London, England. Looking upwards through the ground floor roof, we see a NATS illustration of a flying airliner on the tower's lift shaft. Controlling aviation traffic on the ground and in the controlled airspace around London, the NATS controllers help safely guide up to 6,000 flights a day from the top of the 87 metre high tower, handling 1,350 aircraft movements a day into Heathrow. From the chapter entitled 'Up in the Air' and from the book 'Risk Wise: Nine Everyday Adventures' by Polly Morland (Allianz, The School of Life, Profile Books, 2015).
    adie_dolan_atc10-03-06-2014_1.jpg
  • Exterior view of Heathrow airport's control tower, London. Looking upwards we see the 87 metre high structure in the middle of the airfield. Designed by the Richard Rogers Partnership and opened in 2007, the NATS tower oversees 1,350 aircraft movements a day at Heathrow. From the chapter entitled 'Up in the Air' and from the book 'Risk Wise: Nine Everyday Adventures' by Polly Morland (Allianz, The School of Life, Profile Books, 2015).
    adie_dolan_atc417-03-06-2014_1.jpg
  • Work colleagues in fancy dress for their Christmas party, dressed up as three / four wise men, wait at a bus stop. They are in happy mood having fun looking ridiculous. London, UK.
    20141211_wise men at bus stop_A.jpg
  • Woman in a wedding dress, dressed up as Kate walks the street looking for people called William to hopefully marry. She is rfustrated to not have found anyone yet. Street party on Battersea High Street to celebrate the Royal Wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton, April 29th 2011. Thousands attended this one of the largest street parties in London. Embracing the diversity of the community, the theme of the party is world food, dance and music, with live coverage of the royal Wedding aired on a giant screen.
    20110429royal wedding street partyJ.jpg
  • Woman in a wedding dress, dressed up as Kate walks the street looking for people called William to hopefully marry. She is rfustrated to not have found anyone yet. Street party on Battersea High Street to celebrate the Royal Wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton, April 29th 2011. Thousands attended this one of the largest street parties in London. Embracing the diversity of the community, the theme of the party is world food, dance and music, with live coverage of the royal Wedding aired on a giant screen.
    20110429royal wedding street partyI.jpg
  • Woman in a wedding dress, dressed up as Kate walks the street looking for people called William to hopefully marry. She is rfustrated to not have found anyone yet. Street party on Battersea High Street to celebrate the Royal Wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton, April 29th 2011. Thousands attended this one of the largest street parties in London. Embracing the diversity of the community, the theme of the party is world food, dance and music, with live coverage of the royal Wedding aired on a giant screen.
    20110429royal wedding street partyH.jpg
  • Red brick apartment building in Manhattan, New York City. Looking from a low angle, we see the building rising up into the sky, a high-rise used for domestic purposes near Broadway.
    tim_lynch322-23-05-2014_1.jpg
  • Exterior view of Heathrow airport's control tower, London. Looking upwards we see the 87 metre high structure in the middle of the airfield. Designed by the Richard Rogers Partnership and opened in 2007, the NATS tower oversees 1,350 aircraft movements a day at Heathrow. From the chapter entitled 'Up in the Air' and from the book 'Risk Wise: Nine Everyday Adventures' by Polly Morland (Allianz, The School of Life, Profile Books, 2015).
    adie_dolan_atc416-03-06-2014_1.jpg
  • A group of young circus artists putting on make up and costumes. This circus group, known as "Circo del Mundo" was created by Bartolome Silva a social worker to help support street kids with very troubled background and lure them off that life  and hopefully aid them into a brighter future, Santiago, Chile.
    cp_chi_0267_1.jpg
  • A young trapeze artist practices his routine with the circus group known as "Circo del Mundo" which are associated with Canada's Cirque de Solei, Santiago, Chile. This circus group was set up to aid and develop young troubled juveniles and remove them from the city streets, give them hope and a brighter future.
    cp_chi_0266_1.jpg
  • Crewman looks out of wondow during flight on a Lockheed Martin-built C-130J Hercules airlifter. Externally similar to the classic Hercules in general appearance, the J model sports considerably updated technology. These differences include new Rolls-Royce AE 2100 D3 turboprops with Dowty R391 composite scimitar propellers, digital avionics (including Head-Up Displays (HUDs) for each pilot). During more than 50 years of service the Hercules family has the longest continuous production run of any military aircraft in history. Strategic, automated low-level airdrops keep 60 road transport vehicles and up to 120 supple troops off hostile roads using only three flight crew.
    farnborough_airshow32-21-07-2010_1.jpg
  • South Bank sunset looking towards the London Eye and Royal Festival Hall on 27th November 2019 in London, England, United Kingdom. The South Bank is a significant arts and entertainment district, and home to an endless list of activities for Londoners, visitors and tourists alike.
    20191127_southbank sunset_001.jpg
  • Tall central Covent Garden area London architecture and illustration of tree in a forest. Looking through the window of an outdoor sports shop in Southampton Street, central London, we see a hanging screen featuring the great outdoors - high branches and trunk of a maple in full leaf. In the background is the corner of a Victorian property, its turret with a coned top echoing the trunk and shape of the tree.
    nature_city03-30-04-2015_1.jpg
  • City workers in fancy dress for their Christmas party walk towards Bank. In all sorts of costumes, they are in happy mood having fun looking ridiculous. London, UK.
    20141211_fancy dress party_C.jpg
  • The first world war memorial beneath the columns and pillars of Royal Exchange, City of London. The tall and solid Corinthian pillars of the 3rd Royal Exchange built in 1842 by Sir William Tite. Looking upwards towards a memorial that commemorates the dead from the First World War of 1914-18 between the converging pillars of the Cornhill Exchange building. Nearby is the famous Bank of England in the City Of London, the financial district, otherwise known as the Square Mile.
    war_memorial02-02-02-2012_1_1.jpg
  • First World War memorial soldier beneath the Bank of England (L) and the columns of Royal Exchange. The tall and solid Corinthian pillars of the 3rd Royal Exchange built in 1842 by Sir William Tite. Looking upwards towards a memorial that commemorates the dead from the First World War of 1914-18 between the converging pillars of the Cornhill Exchange building and beyond, to the famous Bank of England in the City Of London, the financial district, otherwise known as the Square Mile. The Bank of England (formally the Governor and Company of the Bank of England) is the central bank of the United Kingdom and the model on which most modern central banks have been based. It is wholly owned by the Treasury Solicitor on behalf of the Government, with independence in setting monetary policy.
    war_memorial1-27-09-2011_1_1.jpg
  • A young boy has his photo taken at the fairground on Southend pier in the early nineteen sixties. Looking somewhat unsure about having his picture taken while rather getting into a dodgem car. Other older boys are in the background and the younger child here may be nervous about being with older kids. It is a summer's day here at the seaside of Southend, a resort town frequented by Londoners who come out to this Thames estuary seaside town.
    sixties_archive11-20-08-1962_1.jpg
  • Looking upwards through a gap in some trees, we see in the background the huge skyscraper office tower of the Commerzbank (Europe's tallest building (1997–2005), designed by Sir Norman Foster) and other institutions in the financial district of Frankfurt, Germany. In the foreground is a set of traffic lights with a traffic lane arrow direction sign and during the long time-exposure the red, amber and green lights have registered on the film to say stop, ready, go. There is a light mist settling on the cityscape which can be seen around the intense of the street lighting giving the scene a futuristic atmosphere like the Blade Runner movie. Apart from the prime colours (colors) emitted by the traffic lights, the image has an otherwise green hue including the tree foliage which is illuminated by the artificial lamps. The leaves are also blurring because of a faint breeze which registers during a long time-exposure.
    RB-0022.jpg
  • Stenciled on to a white wall is a sign saying No Entry, a notice of dark lettering on white at the top of an art gallery staircase in central London. Looking upwards we see the strong lines of the decor, the black painted rails and staircase divisions for visitors to climb to an upper floor. There are diagonals and angles in this empty landscape of design and architecture.
    no_entry01-30-08-2012.jpg
  • From a low vantage point looking upwards, the atrium of British architect Sir Richard Rogers' Lloyds building in the City of London. We see the post-modern architecture of the insurance underwriters Lloyd's building, home of the insurance institution Lloyd's of London which is located at number 1, Lime Street. Lloyd's is a British insurance market. It serves as a meeting place where multiple financial backers or "members", whether individuals (traditionally known as "Names") or corporations, come together to pool and spread risk. The Lloyds market began in Edward Lloyd's coffeehouse around 1688 and is today the world's leading insurance market providing specialist insurance services to businesses in over 200 countries and territories.
    lloyds_of_london01-18-03-1993.jpg
  • A fire rescue boar passes forensic investigators and police officers looking over the wreckage of The Marchioness pleasure boat, on 20th August 1998, river Thames in London, England. The Marchioness disaster resulted in a fatal collision between two vessels on the River Thames in London on 20 August 1989, which resulted in the drowning of 51 people. The pleasure steamer Marchioness sank after being pushed under by the dredger Bowbelle, late at night close to Cannon Street Railway Bridge.
    marchioness_thames-20-08-1998.jpg
  • A landscape of fields and farming land looking in the direction of Napoleons massed French lines during the Battle of Waterloo, on 25th March 2017, at Waterloo, Belgium. Waterloo was fought  on 18 June 1815 between a French army under Napoleon Bonaparte,  defeated by two of the armies of the Seventh Coalition: an Anglo-led Allied army under the command of the Duke of Wellington, and a Prussian army under the command of Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher, resulting in 41,000 casualties.
    waterloo_battlefield-22-25-03-2017.jpg
  • A London Underground sign is positioned beneath the tall architecture of The Shard at London Bridge. Looking upwards to the point of the Shard's pinnacle, we see the roof of an entrance to the Underground station a few metres from the London Bridge mainline station, a transport hub and gateway to the City of London and Southwark on the Southbank. Standing 306 metres (1,004 ft) high, the Shard by Italian architect Renzo Piano is currently the tallest building in the European Union. It dominates this borough of Southwark in south London.
    tall_shard02-16-02-2016_1.jpg
  • City workers in fancy dress for their Christmas party walk towards Bank. In all sorts of costumes, they are in happy mood having fun looking ridiculous. London, UK.
    20141211_fancy dress party_B.jpg
  • City workers in fancy dress for their Christmas party walk towards Bank. In all sorts of costumes, they are in happy mood having fun looking ridiculous. London, UK.
    20141211_fancy dress party_A.jpg
  • Claudia Gilchrist, 16,  is attending a traditional style prom with her boyfriend Steve Drake. A lot of effort is put into looking right for the night. Dresses have been planned all year and boyfriends are expected to wear matching ties. <br />
In recent years American style prom nights to celebrate graduation from high School have been gaining popularity in the UK.
    IMG_0316_1.jpg
  • Native, Tapiete indians hold out their fishing nets along the Pilcomayo river on the border between Paraguay and Bolivia. They normally wade into the river and scoop up the fish in a sustainable way.
    cp_par_0290_1.jpg
  • St Mary's hospital NHS trust building complex in Paddington, London. Looking upwards to the sky and the tall building, we see the information sign telling outpatients the whereabouts of the NHS departments of Obstretrics and gynaecology. Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust was created on October 1, 2007 by merging St Mary’s NHS Trust and Hammersmith Hospitals NHS Trust and integrating with the faculty of medicine at Imperial College London. Now one of the largest NHS trusts in the country, we have come together with the College to establish one of the UK’s first academic health science centres (AHSCs).
    royal_baby_wait25-22-07-2013_1.jpg
  • Night scene looking down the River Thames towards London Bridge and HMS Belfast.
    20101116hms belfast thamesA.jpg
  • A young woman and boy, members of the Chepang community high up in the mountains in Dhading district.  The Chepangs is an ethnic group which used to be nomadic. Only recently have the settled and their settlements are high up in the mountains. Only a few years ago they did not have any running water and had to bring up water from below but with the help pf Restless Development and their partner NGO Prayash Nepal they now have running clean water from springs diverted into resovoirs and the connected to taps inther settlement. This not only give them clean water to drink, it also improve hygiene dramatiaclly and improve health and it saves precious time for the women who now spend the 4 hours it used to take getting water growing healhty vegetables.
    IMG_2145_1.jpg
  • A man is relaxing next to a hole leading into a gold mine, another coming out back into the day light. The mines in the small community near Bolgatange in Northern Ghana are dug with shovels and spades and held up by timber, all very precarious. The mine shafts go deep into the ground and run along under the surrounding fields. The small community which has sprung up around the gold finds consists of poor people from all over Northern Ghana,most of them now stuck, not making much money and in dept to their gold dealers.
    IMG_2688_1.jpg
  • Two days after the Irish Republican Army (IRA) exploded a truck bomb on Bishopsgate, a main arterial road that travels north-south through London's financial area, City of London two on-lookers stop to crane their necks upwards to view the damage to the tall HSBC building. With both their hands up to shield the sun from their faces, the men stand aghast at the amount of devastation to their working landscape. It was said that Roman remains could be viewed at the bottom of the pit the bomb created. One person was killed when the one ton fertiliser bomb detonated directly outside the medieval St Ethelburga's church. Buildings up to 500 metres away were damaged, with one and a half million square feet (140,000 m) of office space being affected and over 500 tonnes of glass broken. repair costs reached approx £350 million.
    city_gents_bishopsgate-26-04-1993_1.jpg
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