Show Navigation

Search Results

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

Loading ()...

  • Farmers show off their prize winning heifer. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ?I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_4253_1.jpg
  • Martin Wall shows off his prize winning heifer. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ?I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_4236_1.jpg
  • Prize winning bulls are prepared for the next class. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    IMG_3907_1.jpg
  • David Cormack is something of a celebrity in the cattle-breeding world, not only by dint of his family (his father was stockman to Lord Elgin), but also because in 2007 Cormack took an unprecedented five prizes with a four-year-old Limousin cow, Newstart Upsydaisy, at the Royal Show. Roughly the equivalent of a football club winning five major cups in a season, this raised the cow's value from about £10,000 to £41,000 when she was sold. The Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses.
    IMG_3482-2_1.jpg
  • Farmer with prize winning lamb. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses..At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    great_yorkshire_show_14copy_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a young girl holding her First Prize winning pony at a gymkhana meeting, on 2nd July 1995, in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England. Gymkhana is an Indian Raj term which originally referred to a place where sporting events took place and referred to any of various meets at which contests were held to test the skill of the competitors. In the United Kingdom and east coast of the United States, the term gymkhana now almost always refers to an equestrian event for riders on horses, often with the emphasis on childrens participation such as those organised here by the Pony Club. Gymkhana classes include timed speed events such as barrel racing, keyhole, keg race also known as down and back, flag race, and pole bending.
    first_prize_pony-02-07-1995.jpg
  • Hillary Mattinson is the owner of Nettlesyke Kerryn, a shearling one-year-old Ryeland ewe. Nettlesyke Kerryn was named Champion Female Ryeland and has  won a couple of other classes. Her husband, Alan, a long-distance lorry driver, helps with the sheep and goes to shows with her, (they stay in their 'old dilapidated caravan'). 'I remember one year it rained the day before and the sheep were outside. We were up till 3am trying to get them dry,' Hillary says. The Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows, is famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses.
    IMG_4359_1.jpg
  • Imogen Sutcliffe with saddle back. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    IMG_4294_1.jpg
  • Jimmy Fitton stewards in the Heifer class. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    IMG_4255_1.jpg
  • Anna with a seven month old Holstein Heifer called Wiske Manor Outside Pansy. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses..At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    IMG_4215_1.jpg
  • A young girl shows in the heifer class. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ?I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_4154_1.jpg
  • A champion Bull. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    IMG_3979_1.jpg
  • Showing in the bull class. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    IMG_3966_1.jpg
  • A young girl grooms one of her pigs prior to showing. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    IMG_3844_1.jpg
  • Paul Harrison with a South Devon bull. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses..At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ? I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_3817_1.jpg
  • Calumn Smith shows off his bull.  The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses..At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ? I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_3801_1.jpg
  • Calumn Smith shows off his bull.  The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses..At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ? I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_3790_1.jpg
  • Showing in the bull class. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    IMG_3102_1.jpg
  • Preparation for showing in the bull class. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses..At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ? I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_3066_1.jpg
  • Preparation for showing in the bull class. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses..At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ? I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_3007_1.jpg
  • Preparation for showing in the bull class. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses..At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ? I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_3029_1.jpg
  • Preparation for showing in the bull class. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ? I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_3003_1.jpg
  • Showing in the bull class. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses..At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ? I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_2991_1.jpg
  • Judging heifers. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses..At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ? I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_2969_1.jpg
  • Showing in the bull class. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses..At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ? I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_2978_1.jpg
  • Showing in the bull class. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses..At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ? I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_2964_1.jpg
  • Farmer with cattle to show. The Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ?I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    great_yorkshire_show_28copy_1.jpg
  • Robin & Val,  spectators,  take their grooming seriously as do some of the contestants. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows.   Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    great_yorkshire_show00rt_1.jpg
  • Showing in the bull class. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses..At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ? I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    great_yorkshire_show_27copy_1.jpg
  • Tom Alty, right, commentator and judge of Bartle, Lancashire, with Stan Samuels, 'Showing pigs is a performance because you don't have a halter and rope or bridle, you just have a bat [a stick] and a board. You have to have an empathy between pig and handler, but even the good pigs are not as obedient as you'd like. At one show about 15 years ago I asked my wife, who had never taken an animal in the ring, to walk round an old Large Black sow. It was a placid pig, but suddenly there was a grunt and a rush, and the pig disappeared into the horticultural tent, which housed, among other things, a display of eggs. My wife has never been to a show since. The Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows, is famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses.
    great_yorkshire_show_18copy_1.jpg
  • Alice with her pig. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    great_yorkshire_show_11copy_1.jpg
  • Richard Thackery and  Chris george Foster, spectators, pose for pictures. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    great_yorkshire_show_09copy_1.jpg
  • Eileen Hallifield and her husband, Richard, own Dunstall Hector, a two-year-old Longhorn bull. He has had conditioner added to the last lot of water, to keep his coat from drying out. 'They come to like the grooming because it makes their coat so nice and clean,' Hallifield says. 'It would feel nice, wouldn't it? They are like one of the family, although they are not a pet like a cat or a dog because eventually they have to go,' Hallifield adds. Dunstall Hector has since been sold for breeding, but the Hallifields  will have a framed portrait of him in their living-room. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses..At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    great_yorkshire_show_03_1.jpg
  • A young girl preparing for the heifer class. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ?I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_4146_1.jpg
  • Anna grooming a seven month old Holstein Heifer called Wiske Manor Outside Pansy..The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    IMG_4186_1.jpg
  • Paul Harrison with a South Devon bull. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses..At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ? I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_3810_1.jpg
  • Eileen Hallifield and her husband, Richard, own Dunstall Hector, a two-year-old Longhorn bull. He has had conditioner added to the last lot of water, to keep his coat from drying out. 'They come to like the grooming because it makes their coat so nice and clean,' Hallifield says. 'It would feel nice, wouldn't it? They are like one of the family, although they are not a pet like a cat or a dog because eventually they have to go,' Hallifield adds. Dunstall Hector has since been sold for breeding, but the Hallifields  will have a framed portrait of him in their living-room. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    IMG_3333_1.jpg
  • Showing in the bull class. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses..At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ? I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_2966_1.jpg
  • John Taylor, vet, from Holmfirth in West Yorkshire,  and his wife, Sharon, a veterinary nurse, have had Clydesdales for 14 years. When it comes to the preparation and showing, Taylor says, 'I do the washing and she does the plaiting and the ribbons - she is the artistic one. 'Mind you, it's not easy. Billy was clean when we brought him here, but he just lay down in something horrid while I wasn't watching. That's why I'm working late, cleaning him to get him ready for tomorrow. Billy is a family member as far as we're concerned, but I called him all the names under the sun when I saw how dirty he'd got.' The Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows, is famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses.
    great_yorkshire_show_10copy_1.jpg
  • Spectators take a break between the many, many activities on offer.  The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    IMG_4026_1.jpg
  • John Taylor, ferret handler, surprisingly there is a living to be made with ferrets for experts like John..The Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows, is famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    IMG_4421-2_1.jpg
  • Guy Cowling, judging  a bull class along with spectators. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    IMG_3982_1.jpg
  • A reluctant contestant is drawn towards the showing ring. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    IMG_3677_1.jpg
  • Two young girls stroke and pat a white horse in its stall. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ? I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_3277_1.jpg
  • Bill House a judge in the saddle back class. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    IMG_3223_1.jpg
  • Contestants in the Saddle back pig class. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    IMG_3171_1.jpg
  • Tom Alty, commentator and judge of Bartle, Lancashire chats about the quality of the pigs with a fellow judge, Stan Samuels. 'Showing pigs is a performance because you don't have a halter and rope or bridle, you just have a bat [a stick] and a board. You have to have an empathy between pig and handler, but even the good pigs are not as obedient as you'd like. At one show about 15 years ago I asked my wife, who had never taken an animal in the ring, to walk round an old Large Black sow. It was a placid pig, but suddenly there was a grunt and a rush, and the pig disappeared into the horticultural tent, which housed, among other things, a display of eggs. My wife has never been to a show since.'
    IMG_3187_1.jpg
  • Preparation for showing in the bull class. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses..At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ? I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_3052_1.jpg
  • Preparation for showing in the bull class. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses..At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ? I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_2993_1.jpg
  • Preapring a cow for showing in the heifer class. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses..At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ? I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    IMG_2930_1.jpg
  • Heather Whittaker grooming her cow for competition. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses..At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals. As one competitor put it ? I'm proud to say that the cattle are my friend, I have had cattle who have died and I have sat down and wept for them?
    great_yorkshire_show_08copy_1.jpg
  • Brian Brock, accident damage assessor, pigeon fancier and judge from Leeds.A former president of the National Pigeon Association, Brian Brock has been keeping pigeons since 1946, when his sister bought him a pair from Leeds market for his sixth birthday. Today he owns more than 70. There are hundreds of different kinds of pigeon, though they can be categorised into racing and fancy breeds. Judges assess them on such attributes as eye colour, feather composition, firmness of body and presentation. 'The flat-cap image of pigeon breeding has long gone,' Brock says. 'There are all sorts of people in the pigeon world - managing directors, owners of some of the biggest stores in the country.' He concedes, however, that as a pastime it is declining in popularity, partly because of electronic entertainment. 'I think kids might well be getting out of an Xbox what I used to get out of pigeons; they live by it, just as I lived by my birds. 'For me, the pigeons are a way of closing off from things. I sometimes sit for four or five hours, just watching my birds. I have a relationship with the individual birds, and you learn to read a pigeon's temperament. They are like athletes, you see, they have off days.'
    great_yorkshire_show_05copy_1.jpg
  • A competitor takes a break in the cow shed. The hairdryers are out and the shampoo is flowing at the Great Yorkshire Show, one of Britain's biggest agricultural shows. Its famous for its competitive displays of livestock. The event, established in 1837, attracts over 125 000 visitors a year and has over 10 000 entries to its pedigree competitions ranging from pigeons and rabbits to bulls and shire horses. At the heart of the show is the passion of the exhibitors who spend hundreds of hours ( and pounds)  training, preparing and grooming their animals.
    great_yorkshire_show_02_1.jpg
  • Seamus Heaney, Nobel prize winning Poet, at home photographed shortly before the launch of his latest collection of poems "District and Circle ". Seamus died August 30, 2013.
    l.quail64_1_1.jpg
  • Seamus Heaney, Nobel prize winning Poet, at home photographed shortly before the launch of his latest collection of poems "District and Circle ". Seamus died August 30, 2013.
    l.quail54_1_1.jpg
  • Seamus Heaney, Nobel prize winning Poet, on the coast near his  home photographed shortly before the launch of his latest collection of poems "District and Circle ". Seamus died August 30, 2013.
    seamus_sharpest-2_1_1.jpg
  • Seamus Heaney, Nobel prize winning Poet, at home photographed shortly before the launch of his latest collection of poems "District and Circle ". Seamus died August 30, 2013.
    seamus_minolta_1_1.jpg
  • Seamus Heaney, Nobel prize winning Poet, at home photographed shortly before the launch of his latest collection of poems "District and Circle ". Seamus died August 30, 2013.
    l.quail80_1_1.jpg
  • Seamus Heaney, Nobel prize winning Poet, at home photographed shortly before the launch of his latest collection of poems "District and Circle ". Seamus died August 30, 2013.
    l.quail67_1_1.jpg
  • Seamus Heaney, Nobel prize winning Poet, at home photographed shortly before the launch of his latest collection of poems "District and Circle ". Seamus died August 30, 2013.
    l.quail08_1_1.jpg
  • Seamus Heaney, Nobel prize winning Poet, at home photographed shortly before the launch of his latest collection of poems "District and Circle ". Seamus died August 30, 2013.
    l.quail55_1_1.jpg
  • Seamus Heaney, Nobel prize winning Poet, at home photographed shortly before the launch of his latest collection of poems "District and Circle ". Seamus died August 30, 2013.
    l.quail29_1_1.jpg
  • Seamus Heaney, Nobel prize winning Poet, at home photographed shortly before the launch of his latest collection of poems "District and Circle ". Seamus died August 30, 2013.
    l.quail25_1_1.jpg
  • Seamus Heaney, Nobel prize winning Poet, at home photographed shortly before the launch of his latest collection of poems "District and Circle ". Seamus died August 30, 2013.
    l.quail20_1_1.jpg
  • Seamus Heaney, Nobel prize winning Poet, on the coast near his  home photographed shortly before the launch of his latest collection of poems "District and Circle ". Seamus died August 30, 2013.
    060302louisquail1202_1_1.jpg
  • The Hardraw Scaur Brass Band Festival. Young members of Tingley band delighted to be winning a prize. Organised by the Yorkshire and Humberside Brass Band Association, the competition is Britain's second oldest outdoor contest and takes place annually in Hardraw Scar in Wensleydale, North Yorkshire, England, UK. The area, a natural amphitheatre, attracts bands from all over the North of England and is a popular event amongst players and audiences alike.
    20150913_hardraw brass band comp pri...jpg
  • Dust covered prize certificates from agricultural shows; Free Town (farm), Tarrington, Herefordshire, UK
    A 3811_1.jpg
  • At a beauty talent contest, the finalists line up to await the judges decision. The girls are dressed in all their finery with dresses, pinned up hair and sashes as they're seated in the gym at the Bedford-King Recreation Center in Atlanta, Georgia. The black community hold annual events here including sports competitions and occasions such this pageant where the girls and also boys prove their talents and potential. One young lady however, sees fit to poke her tongue out at the viewer in a cheeky display of humour and character. Her rivals seem oblivious and unaware of her irreverence but perhaps the judge is watching and her chances of winning are now impossible!
    atlanta_girls11-10-1995_1.jpg
  • Greek-born writer of foward-fiction, Panos Karnezis in London where he lives and writes. He sits reading his newspaper at Earls Court Underground station as other commuters are around his oblivious to this up and coming literary star. Author of Little Infamies (2002), The Maze (2004) and the Convent (2010) he is a developing writer of prize-winning fiction, shortlisted for the Whitbread First Novel for the acclaimed Little Infamies. Panos Karnezis was born in Greece in 1967 and came to England in 1992. He studied engineering and worked in industry, then studied for an MA in Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia.
    panos_karnezis06-18-06-2003.jpg
  • Greek-born writer of foward-fiction, Panos Karnezis in London where he lives and writes. Here, he is a west London cemetery, relaxing in long grass amid Victorian headstones. The light is back-lighting this seemingly rural landscape. Author of Little Infamies (2002), The Maze (2004) and the Convent (2010) he is a developing writer of prize-winning fiction, shortlisted for the Whitbread First Novel for the acclaimed Little Infamies. Panos Karnezis was born in Greece in 1967 and came to England in 1992. He studied engineering and worked in industry, then studied for an MA in Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia.
    panos_karnezis03-18-06-2003.jpg
  • Greek-born writer of foward-fiction, Panos Karnezis in London where he lives and writes stands by a wall covered in urban graffiti with arms folded and a slightly mischevious look i his dark eyes. Author of Little Infamies (2002), The Maze (2004) and the Convent (2010) he is a developing writer of prize-winning fiction, shortlisted for the Whitbread First Novel for the acclaimed Little Infamies. Panos Karnezis was born in Greece in 1967 and came to England in 1992. He studied engineering and worked in industry, then studied for an MA in Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia.
    panos_karnezis01-18-06-2003.jpg
  • Greek-born writer of foward-fiction, Panos Karnezis in London where he lives and writes. Here he relaxes in a north London cafe to drink coffee and read his newspaper in a somewhat calm setting where he can remain anonymous. Although, he is a largely unknown literary figure, Karnezis is already the author of Little Infamies (2002), The Maze (2004) and the Convent (2010) he is a developing writer of prize-winning fiction, shortlisted for the Whitbread First Novel for the acclaimed Little Infamies. Panos Karnezis was born in Greece in 1967 and came to England in 1992. He studied engineering and worked in industry, then studied for an MA in Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia.
    panos_karnezis02-18-06-2003.jpg
  • Before finalists take part in their last exercises at a gymkhana pony competition, these rosettes prizes seen here in close-up detail wait to be claimed by young winners and losers. From the top we see prizes for Reserve Champions then those for 1st prize, then second, third and runners-up at the very bottom. Such accolades are won and lost by fractions of a second but their importance is remembered for years afterwards as young girls desperately practice to improve their equestrian skills. A huge commitment is needed by the girls and their parents who spend great deals of money and time for these treasured prizes which can be won or lost by fractions of seconds or single points. Those that fail to win go home feeling empty-handed or perhaps cheated out of victory and glory. Those who win hang them on bedroom walls for years to come.
    rosettes-17-09-1999.jpg
  • Before finalists take part in their last exercises at a gymkhana pony competition, these rosettes prizes seen here in close-up detail wait to be claimed by young winners and losers. From the top we see prizes for Reserve Champions then those for 1st prize, then second, third and runners-up at the very bottom. Such accolades are won and lost by fractions of a second but their importance is remembered for years afterwards as young girls desperately practice to improve their equestrian skills. A huge commitment is needed by the girls and their parents who spend great deals of money and time for these treasured prizes which can be won or lost by fractions of seconds or single points. Those that fail to win go home feeling empty-handed or perhaps cheated out of victory and glory. Those who win hang them on bedroom walls for years to come.
    crufts_rosettes03-16-1987_1.jpg
  • A selection of vegetables entered into the Pickering Horticultural Show competition, Pickering, North Yorkshire, UK
    RA 6-5_1.jpg
  • The Hardraw Scaur Brass Band Festival. Winner of the 2015 contest, Elland band, with their leader Daniel Brooks accepting the trophy. Organised by the Yorkshire and Humberside Brass Band Association, the competition is Britain's second oldest outdoor contest and takes place annually in Hardraw Scar in Wensleydale, North Yorkshire, England, UK. The area, a natural amphitheatre, attracts bands from all over the North of England and is a popular event amongst players and audiences alike.
    20150913_hardraw brass band comp pri...jpg
  • The Hardraw Scaur Brass Band Festival. Winner of the 2015 contest, Elland band, with their leader Daniel Brooks accepting the trophy. Organised by the Yorkshire and Humberside Brass Band Association, the competition is Britain's second oldest outdoor contest and takes place annually in Hardraw Scar in Wensleydale, North Yorkshire, England, UK. The area, a natural amphitheatre, attracts bands from all over the North of England and is a popular event amongst players and audiences alike.
    20150913_hardraw brass band comp pri...jpg
  • Tombola stall at the local community Sunday market in the village of Husthwaite, North Yorkshire, England, UK. Over 20 stalls with a mixture of old favourites and new stalls lelling locally made products. A tombola is a raffle in which the prizes are already assigned to winning tickets before the start. Players pay for a ticket, which they then draw out from a revolving box, and can instantly see whether or not they have won a prize. Tombolas are popular at events such as coffee mornings, when it is expected that not all the players will be present at the end of the event.
    20150913_husthwaite village market t...jpg
  • Tombola stall at the local community Sunday market in the village of Husthwaite, North Yorkshire, England, UK. Over 20 stalls with a mixture of old favourites and new stalls lelling locally made products. A tombola is a raffle in which the prizes are already assigned to winning tickets before the start. Players pay for a ticket, which they then draw out from a revolving box, and can instantly see whether or not they have won a prize. Tombolas are popular at events such as coffee mornings, when it is expected that not all the players will be present at the end of the event.
    20150913_husthwaite village market t...jpg
  • Tombola stall at the local community Sunday market in the village of Husthwaite, North Yorkshire, England, UK. Over 20 stalls with a mixture of old favourites and new stalls lelling locally made products. A tombola is a raffle in which the prizes are already assigned to winning tickets before the start. Players pay for a ticket, which they then draw out from a revolving box, and can instantly see whether or not they have won a prize. Tombolas are popular at events such as coffee mornings, when it is expected that not all the players will be present at the end of the event.
    20150913_husthwaite village market t...jpg
  • Tombola stall at the local community Sunday market in the village of Husthwaite, North Yorkshire, England, UK. Over 20 stalls with a mixture of old favourites and new stalls lelling locally made products. A tombola is a raffle in which the prizes are already assigned to winning tickets before the start. Players pay for a ticket, which they then draw out from a revolving box, and can instantly see whether or not they have won a prize. Tombolas are popular at events such as coffee mornings, when it is expected that not all the players will be present at the end of the event.
    20150913_husthwaite village market t...jpg
  • Tombola stall at the local community Sunday market in the village of Husthwaite, North Yorkshire, England, UK. Over 20 stalls with a mixture of old favourites and new stalls lelling locally made products. A tombola is a raffle in which the prizes are already assigned to winning tickets before the start. Players pay for a ticket, which they then draw out from a revolving box, and can instantly see whether or not they have won a prize. Tombolas are popular at events such as coffee mornings, when it is expected that not all the players will be present at the end of the event.
    20150913_husthwaite village market t...jpg
  • Tombola stall at the local community Sunday market in the village of Husthwaite, North Yorkshire, England, UK. Over 20 stalls with a mixture of old favourites and new stalls lelling locally made products. A tombola is a raffle in which the prizes are already assigned to winning tickets before the start. Players pay for a ticket, which they then draw out from a revolving box, and can instantly see whether or not they have won a prize. Tombolas are popular at events such as coffee mornings, when it is expected that not all the players will be present at the end of the event.
    20150913_husthwaite village market t...jpg
  • Tombola stall at the local community Sunday market in the village of Husthwaite, North Yorkshire, England, UK. Over 20 stalls with a mixture of old favourites and new stalls lelling locally made products. A tombola is a raffle in which the prizes are already assigned to winning tickets before the start. Players pay for a ticket, which they then draw out from a revolving box, and can instantly see whether or not they have won a prize. Tombolas are popular at events such as coffee mornings, when it is expected that not all the players will be present at the end of the event.
    20150913_husthwaite village market t...jpg
  • Tombola stall at the local community Sunday market in the village of Husthwaite, North Yorkshire, England, UK. Over 20 stalls with a mixture of old favourites and new stalls lelling locally made products. A tombola is a raffle in which the prizes are already assigned to winning tickets before the start. Players pay for a ticket, which they then draw out from a revolving box, and can instantly see whether or not they have won a prize. Tombolas are popular at events such as coffee mornings, when it is expected that not all the players will be present at the end of the event.
    20150913_husthwaite village market t...jpg
  • Tombola stall at the local community Sunday market in the village of Husthwaite, North Yorkshire, England, UK. Over 20 stalls with a mixture of old favourites and new stalls lelling locally made products. A tombola is a raffle in which the prizes are already assigned to winning tickets before the start. Players pay for a ticket, which they then draw out from a revolving box, and can instantly see whether or not they have won a prize. Tombolas are popular at events such as coffee mornings, when it is expected that not all the players will be present at the end of the event.
    20150913_husthwaite village market t...jpg
  • The statue of Dame Millicent Fawcett, the suffragist leader and social campaigner, at Parliament Square on the 4th October 2019 in London in the United Kingdom. The statue is a 2018 work by the Turner Prize-winning artist Gillian Wearing.
    D_Millicent_Fawcett-1046231.jpg
  • The statue of Dame Millicent Fawcett, the suffragist leader and social campaigner, at Parliament Square on the 4th October 2019 in London in the United Kingdom. The statue is a 2018 work by the Turner Prize-winning artist Gillian Wearing.
    D_Millicent_Fawcett-1046228.jpg
  • During proceedings at the North Somerset Show, a farmer holds on to his prize bull after judging. This fine animal has gained a First and its rosette is attached to the cheekpiece of his halter. The bull is a Hereford, a breed widely raised mainly for meat production. With its traditional ring piercing its nose, the male is a heavyweight of the cattle kingdom and is a fine specimen that deserves to win his prize. Its value as a sperm donor has now increased considerably. Originally from Herefordshire, England, United Kingdom, more than five million pedigree Hereford Cattle now exist in over 50 countries. The Hereford Cattle export trade began from United Kingdom in 1817. Today, Hereford cattle dominate the world scene from Australasia to the Russian steppes. Hereford Cattle can be found in Israel, Japan and throughout Continental Europe and Scandinavia
    champion_bull-28-05-1990_1.jpg
  • Cups and prizes in the trophy room at Anfield, the sacred home to Liverpool Football Club. Liverpool Football Club is an English Premier League football club based in Liverpool, Merseyside. Liverpool has won eighteen League titles, second most in English football, seven FA Cups and a record seven League Cups. Liverpool has won more European titles than any other English club, with five European Cups, three UEFA Cups and three Super Cups. Liverpool was founded in 1892 and admitted into the Football League the following year. The club has played at its home ground, Anfield, since its founding.
    liverpool_trophies01-26-03-2000.jpg
  • Winning and losing contestants line up to receive their prizes at a gymkhana in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire. The point of focus is a young cheeky-faced girl adorned with a winners’ special rosette and she grins cheekily to her friend alongside. Far right another girl less satisfied inspects her own rosette. The word gymkhana is an Indian Raj term that referred to a place where sporting events took place to test the skill of the competitors. In the UK and east coast of the US, the term gymkhana now almost always refers to an equestrian event for riders on horses, often with the emphasis on children's participation (such as those organised here by the Pony Club). Gymkhana classes include timed speed events such as barrel racing, keyhole, keg race (also known as "down and back"), flag race, and pole bending.
    gymkhana01-17-09-1999_1.jpg
  • Secretary of State for the Environment and Conservative MP, Chris Patten pulls winning raffle tickets during the ball at the Conservative party conference on 11th October 1991 in Blackpool, England.
    chris_patten02-11-10-1991.jpg
  • Ben Okri, poet and Booker Prize winning novelist. Born in 1959 in Nigeria.
    SFE_070813_0001.jpg
  • Arundhati Roy, Booker Prize winning author of "The God of Small Things" at her home in New Delhi, India. In recent years, Roy has concentrated on journalism and activism around such causes as human rights and justice in her native India.
    SFE_070214_0037.jpg
  • Arundhati Roy, Booker Prize winning author of "The God of Small Things" at her home in New Delhi, India. In recent years, Roy has concentrated on journalism and activism around such causes as human rights and justice in her native India.
    SFE_070214_0036.jpg
  • Arundhati Roy, Booker Prize winning author of "The God of Small Things" at her home in New Delhi, India. In recent years, Roy has concentrated on journalism and activism around such causes as human rights and justice in her native India.
    SFE_070214_0035.jpg
  • Arundhati Roy, Booker Prize winning author of "The God of Small Things" at her home in New Delhi, India. In recent years, Roy has concentrated on journalism and activism around such causes as human rights and justice in her native India.
    SFE_070214_0034.jpg
  • A female farmer with her prize winning cow during the Grand Parade of the Suffolk Show on the 29th May 2019 in Ipswich in the United Kingdom. The Suffolk Show is an annual show that takes place in Trinity Park, Ipswich in the English county of Suffolk. It is organised by the Suffolk Agricultural Association.
    SuffolkShow2019-2507.jpg
  • A female farmer with her prize winning cow during the Grand Parade of the Suffolk Show on the 29th May 2019 in Ipswich in the United Kingdom. The Suffolk Show is an annual show that takes place in Trinity Park, Ipswich in the English county of Suffolk. It is organised by the Suffolk Agricultural Association.
    SuffolkShow2019-2504.jpg
  • British writer Kazuo Ishiguro in London. Kazuo Ishiguro OBE (born 8 November 1954) is a Japanese-born British novelist. He was born in Nagasaki, Japan, and his family moved to England in 1960 when he was 5 years old. Ishiguro is one of the most celebrated contemporary fiction authors in the English-speaking world, having received four Man Booker Prize nominations, and winning the 1989 for his novel The Remains of the Day. In 2008, The Times ranked Ishiguro 32nd on their list of "The 50 greatest British writers since 1945".
    Kazuo Ishiguro.jpg
Next
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

In Pictures

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