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  • The entrance to the Theatre Royal Windsor is pictured on 13 October 2020 in Windsor, United Kingdom. The Theatre Royal Windsor reopens this evening for the first time since March with a production of A.R. Gurney’s ‘Love Letters’ for a socially-distanced audience, having recently announced a winter schedule of productions to be performed in accordance with its coronavirus risk assessments and COVID-19 secure policy.
    MK-20201013-Theatre-Royal-Windsor-Re...jpg
  • The entrance to the Theatre Royal Windsor is pictured on 13 October 2020 in Windsor, United Kingdom. The Theatre Royal Windsor reopens this evening for the first time since March with a production of A.R. Gurney’s ‘Love Letters’ for a socially-distanced audience, having recently announced a winter schedule of productions to be performed in accordance with its coronavirus risk assessments and COVID-19 secure policy.
    MK-20201013-Theatre-Royal-Windsor-Re...jpg
  • The entrance to the Theatre Royal Windsor is pictured on 13 October 2020 in Windsor, United Kingdom. The Theatre Royal Windsor reopens this evening for the first time since March with a production of A.R. Gurney’s ‘Love Letters’ for a socially-distanced audience, having recently announced a winter schedule of productions to be performed in accordance with its coronavirus risk assessments and COVID-19 secure policy.
    MK-20201013-Theatre-Royal-Windsor-Re...jpg
  • The entrance to the Theatre Royal Windsor is pictured on 13 October 2020 in Windsor, United Kingdom. The Theatre Royal Windsor reopens this evening for the first time since March with a production of A.R. Gurney’s ‘Love Letters’ for a socially-distanced audience, having recently announced a winter schedule of productions to be performed in accordance with its coronavirus risk assessments and COVID-19 secure policy.
    MK-20201013-Theatre-Royal-Windsor-Re...jpg
  • The entrance to the Theatre Royal Windsor is pictured on 13 October 2020 in Windsor, United Kingdom. The Theatre Royal Windsor reopens this evening for the first time since March with a production of A.R. Gurney’s ‘Love Letters’ for a socially-distanced audience, having recently announced a winter schedule of productions to be performed in accordance with its coronavirus risk assessments and COVID-19 secure policy.
    MK-20201013-Theatre-Royal-Windsor-Re...jpg
  • Coronavirus instructions are pictured outside the entrance to the Theatre Royal Windsor on 13 October 2020 in Windsor, United Kingdom. The Theatre Royal Windsor reopens this evening for the first time since March with a production of A.R. Gurney’s ‘Love Letters’ for a socially-distanced audience, having recently announced a winter schedule of productions to be performed in accordance with its coronavirus risk assessments and COVID-19 secure policy.
    MK-20201013-Theatre-Royal-Windsor-Re...jpg
  • Families with giant letters across the grass in Brockwell Park in Herne Hill, SE24, spelling Lambeth, the largest in area, of London boroughs. The letters are a remnant of the Lambeth Country Show, an annual iner-city weekend festival featuring local businesses and entertainment, it celebrates the successes of Lambeth's achivevements for its population of approximately 303,000.
    love_lambeth01-02-08-2015_1.jpg
  • Tall black man with giant letters across the grass in Brockwell Park in Herne Hill, SE24., spelling Lambeth, the largest in area, of London boroughs. The letters are a remnant of the Lambeth Country Show, an annual iner-city weekend festival featuring local businesses and entertainment, it celebrates the successes of Lambeth's achivevements for its population of approximately 303,000.
    love_lambeth04-02-08-2015_1.jpg
  • Large Great Dane dog owner with giant letters spelling Lambeth, the largest in area, of London boroughs. The pet stalks across the grass in Brockwell Park in Herne Hill, SE24. The letters are a remnant of the Lambeth Country Show, an annual iner-city weekend festival featuring local businesses and entertainment, it celebrates the successes of Lambeth's achivevements for its population of approximately 303,000.
    love_lambeth02-02-08-2015_1.jpg
  • Families with giant letters across the grass in Brockwell Park in Herne Hill, SE24, spelling Lambeth, the largest in area, of London boroughs. The letters are a remnant of the Lambeth Country Show, an annual iner-city weekend festival featuring local businesses and entertainment, it celebrates the successes of Lambeth's achivevements for its population of approximately 303,000.
    love_lambeth01-02-08-2015_1.jpg
  • Large Great Dane dog owner with giant letters spelling Lambeth, the largest in area, of London boroughs. The pet stalks across the grass in Brockwell Park in Herne Hill, SE24. The letters are a remnant of the Lambeth Country Show, an annual iner-city weekend festival featuring local businesses and entertainment, it celebrates the successes of Lambeth's achivevements for its population of approximately 303,000.
    love_lambeth02-02-08-2015_1.jpg
  • Tall black man with giant letters across the grass in Brockwell Park in Herne Hill, SE24., spelling Lambeth, the largest in area, of London boroughs. The letters are a remnant of the Lambeth Country Show, an annual iner-city weekend festival featuring local businesses and entertainment, it celebrates the successes of Lambeth's achivevements for its population of approximately 303,000.
    love_lambeth04-02-08-2015_1.jpg
  • Messages of love written in marker pen on a public park sign containing local bylaws. The large letters form the words LOVE YOU in the centre of frame - an amorous declaration of affection - by an admirer followed in red writing of the words "I love you too!" The scrawled writing is on the background of a local park's laws that indicate in parts 2 and 3 what not to do in this public space in south London, England.
    love_you01-08-01-2013.jpg
  • The trimmed topiary forming the letters spelling Love in a public park, on 22nd April 2017, in Clevedon, North Somerset, England.
    love_topiary-01-22-04-2017.jpg
  • A prisoner reading a letter from a loved one. HMP/YOI Portland, Dorset. A resettlement prison with a capacity for 530 prisoners.  Portland, Dorset, United Kingdom.
    UK-Criminal-Justice-Prison-7603_1.jpg
  • Glittering sign displaying the word 'love'. Blue and silver discs for the word on this hanging display.
    _MG_0666.jpg
  • Glittering sign displaying the word 'love'. Blue and silver discs for the word on this hanging display.
    _MG_0674.jpg
  • A flying helmet belonging to a member of the elite 'Red Arrows', Britain's prestigious Royal Air Force aerobatic team, is cradled in the highly-polished open Plexiglass  canopy of a team Hawk jet aircraft. With the arrow pointing downwards we see it from below along with the airplane's red fuselage and the words Royal Air Force stencilled in blue lettering on the side within a white stripe. There are strong angles with clear blue space on the top right. The colours that dominate this image are red, white and blue - the colors of the Union Jack, United Kingdom's flag. This scene is at RAF Akrotiri, Cypus where the Red Arrows put the finishing touches to their display sequences before starting the gruelling air show calendar in the UK and Europe. The squadron represents all that is perfect with aerobatic flying, about teamwork and discipline.
    Red_Arrows102_RBA_1.jpg
  • Gandi Gul, widow, mother of 4 holds the death certificate, which she cannot read, of her son Esmail. He was 18 and had fallen in love with a girl but her father didn’t approve and arranged with the local Taliban to have Esmail killed.
    afg10.jpg
  • Gandi Gul, widow, mother of 4 holds the death certificate, which she cannot read, of her son Esmail. He was 18 and had fallen in love with a girl but her father didn’t approve and arranged with the local Taliban to have Esmail killed.
    afg1.jpg
  • 'Love Anarchy' graffiti on a wall on a wall on the Rio de San Margherita canal in Dorsoduro, a district of Venice, Italy. The writing is on bare plaster behind which we see brick of unknown date or era. Anarchist ideology can be seen in various locations around Venice though more common in the more residential district like Dorsoduro and Castello.
    venice_110-23-07-2015_1.jpg
  • A valentines Day merchandise retail window in the City of London. The word Love has been pasted on to the window in large lettering above Happy Valentines. Cheap and cheerful gifts for this romantic occasion can be seen in the background as well as a Valentine's Day balloon. Valentine's Day takings are expected to exceed £1.3bn, says the British Retail Consortium. The spending is led by generous — or panicking — men. It was estimated last year that British men would fork out £622m between them, compared to the £354m spent by women
    valentine_window01-09-02-2015_1.jpg
  • Glittering sign displaying the word 'water'. Blue and silver discs for the word on this hanging display.
    _MG_0671.jpg
  • A memorial has been placed where a young man called ‘Aiden’ died in Prebend Street, London, England. If we just ignored this place where someone's life ended, the victim would just be a statistic but flowers are left to die too with touching poems written by family and loved-ones: “Champion among men, now a champion of angels/A star in the Heavens has been named in memory of Aiden.” From a project about makeshift shrines: Britons have long installed memorials in the landscape: Statues and monuments to war heroes, Princesses and the socially privileged. But nowadays we lay wreaths to the ordinary who die suddenly - killed as pedestrians, as drivers or by alcohol, all celebrated on our roadsides and in cities with simple, haunting roadside remembrances.
    memorials017-05-07_2000.jpg
  • Red carnations and roses form a cortege memorial to notorious 60s gangster twin Ronnie Kray during East End funeral. The words ‘Ron God Bless’ are written in silver lettering in honour of the recently deceased Ronald, commonly referred to as Ron or Ronnie who suffered from paranoid schizophrenia. Ronnie and his twin brother Reggie were involved in armed robberies, arson, protection rackets and violent assaults including torture. During the 1950s and 60s. They terrorised their organised crime competitors but were loved by the communities of East London. The Kray gangster twins were eventually jailed separately in 1969 and Ronnie remained in Broadmoor (psychiatric) Hospital until his death on 17 March 1995.
    ronnie_kray_funeral01-29-03-1995.jpg
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