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  • With few visitors to see, a young boy pees into the water surrounding a model town at the Splendid China model village, the 30 hectares large tourist attraction in the city of Shenzen, China. The kid aims into the water with his mother's help. In the background we see some of the 50,000 ceramic figures and scenes from a period in Chinese history and further away, modern skyscrapers in the metropolis contrasting with ancient, traditional village life. Splendid China is an attraction at the Overseas Chinese Town, Shenzhen that has scaled down replicas of China's historical buildings, wonderful scenes and folk customs. The scale models are of a 1:15 with 100 miniaturized landmarks such as The Terracotta Warriors; Great Wall; Forbidden City; Old Summer Palace etc. all laid out according to their geographic locations.
    shenzhen_peeing04-21-1995_1_1.jpg
  • Undressed female mannequins, awaiting latest clothing show body forms and proportions in a central London street. As proof of how the fashion and retail industries see the perfect woman's form, we see a skinnier look, the proportions of a curvy rather than a rounded female shape. Womens' groups however see this as unrepresentative, undermining how women see themselves portrayed accurately in the shop window and therefore in everyday life.
    retail_window08-04-02-2015_1.jpg
  • Undressed female mannequins, awaiting latest clothing show body forms and proportions in a central London street. As proof of how the fashion and retail industries see the perfect woman's form, we see a skinnier look, the proportions of a curvy rather than a rounded female shape. Womens' groups however see this as unrepresentative, undermining how women see themselves portrayed accurately in the shop window and therefore in everyday life.
    retail_window06-04-02-2015_1.jpg
  • Shop mannequins await dressing and styling in a central London window. Limbs and heads populate the retail space in the early evening as an assistant is about to restyle the shop display. None have clothing nor wigs - and in one case, no arms either making a comical scene of retail, business and trends of proportions of what the industry considers normal and acceptable sizes of humanity.
    shop_mannequins01-19-03-2015_1.jpg
  • Mannequins of women show a sexist stereotype of their gender, outside a clothing business in south London. High street styles and fashions are on display here, showing a sexist representation of how women might appear. As proof of how the fashion and retail industries see the perfect woman's form, we see a skinnier look, the proportions of a curvy rather than a rounded female shape. Womens' groups however see this as unrepresentative, undermining how women see themselves portrayed accurately in the shop window and therefore in everyday life.
    sexist_mannequins06-10-02-2015.jpg
  • An athletic man poses against a wall on Ocean Drive in Miami Beach, Florida. This fine specimen of a man wears roller-blades and trousers tucked into his skates with a yellow t-shirt with the word Frequency across his pectoral muscles. His shdow appears across the wall and because of the angle, his shape has been greatly exaggerated, his body becoming a much wider, stockier proportion than the reality. He stands with an arm resting high on the wall and the other on his hip, almost in a feminine manner. He is nonetheless the epitome of maleness, of virility with the healthy physique that women adore and other men are jealous of! The sdidewalk pavement arcs around a corner and the wall with its long shadow is a strong diagonal line across the picture, disappearing to the far right.
    miami_beach05-15-12-2007 .jpg
  • Mannequins of women show a sexist stereotype of their gender, outside a clothing business in south London. High street styles and fashions are on display here, showing a sexist representation of how women might appear. As proof of how the fashion and retail industries see the perfect woman's form, we see a skinnier look, the proportions of a curvy rather than a rounded female shape. Womens' groups however see this as unrepresentative, undermining how women see themselves portrayed accurately in the shop window and therefore in everyday life.
    sexist_mannequins08-10-02-2015.jpg
  • Mannequins of women show a sexist stereotype of their gender, outside a clothing business in south London. High street styles and fashions are on display here, showing a sexist representation of how women might appear. As proof of how the fashion and retail industries see the perfect woman's form, we see a skinnier look, the proportions of a curvy rather than a rounded female shape. Womens' groups however see this as unrepresentative, undermining how women see themselves portrayed accurately in the shop window and therefore in everyday life.
    sexist_mannequins07-10-02-2015.jpg
  • Mannequins of women show a sexist stereotype of their gender, outside a clothing business in south London. High street styles and fashions are on display here, showing a sexist representation of how women might appear. As proof of how the fashion and retail industries see the perfect woman's form, we see a skinnier look, the proportions of a curvy rather than a rounded female shape. Womens' groups however see this as unrepresentative, undermining how women see themselves portrayed accurately in the shop window and therefore in everyday life.
    sexist_mannequins05-10-02-2015.jpg
  • Mannequins of women show a sexist stereotype of their gender, outside a clothing business in south London. High street styles and fashions are on display here, showing a sexist representation of how women might appear. As proof of how the fashion and retail industries see the perfect woman's form, we see a skinnier look, the proportions of a curvy rather than a rounded female shape. Womens' groups however see this as unrepresentative, undermining how women see themselves portrayed accurately in the shop window and therefore in everyday life.
    sexist_mannequins04-10-02-2015.jpg
  • Mannequins of women show a sexist stereotype of their gender, outside a clothing business in south London. High street styles and fashions are on display here, showing a sexist representation of how women might appear. As proof of how the fashion and retail industries see the perfect woman's form, we see a skinnier look, the proportions of a curvy rather than a rounded female shape. Womens' groups however see this as unrepresentative, undermining how women see themselves portrayed accurately in the shop window and therefore in everyday life.
    sexist_mannequins03-10-02-2015.jpg
  • A local woman walks past colourful dress designs on a stall at the weekly market at Qurna, a village on the West Bank of Luxor, Nile Valley, Egypt. The latest in patterns for the modern Egyptian woman are being sold in a beautiful line of fashions and styles. Amidst the bustle of this busy regular event, people from many miles around have come to trade and buy their provisions.
    egypt17-01-03-2016_1.jpg
  • Colourful dress designs hang from a line on a stall at the weekly market at Qurna, a village on the West Bank of Luxor, Nile Valley, Egypt. The latest in patterns for the modern Egyptian woman are being sold in a beautiful line of fashions and styles. Amidst the bustle of this busy regular event, people from many miles around have come to trade and buy their provisions.
    egypt15-01-03-2016_1.jpg
  • Covered mannequins, awaiting clothing in a London retail shop window. White covers have been draped over the models in readiness for new clothing to be placed on them by the shop's owner. The lower legs stand on the floor in the window and the upper torsos rest on the ground, awaiting fashionable styles. The retailer is an independent shop off central London's Oxford Street.
    covered_mannequins02-14-01-2016.jpg
  • A woman smokes a cigarette by a large red number One and Two, part of an art installation entitled 'One Through Zero (The Ten Numbers)' by American pop artist Robert Indiana (b 1928), in Lime Street, City of London, the capital's Square Mile, and its financial heart. Situated in the capital's Square Mile, its financial heart, are surrounding offices and corporate headquarters from the finance and insurance sector, most notably being the nearby Lloyds of London building. This series of sculptures is composed of 10 brightly painted numerical digits, each made of aluminum and set on its own base. Their construction took place at the former Lippincott Foundry in North Haven, Connecticut from 1980 to 1983
    city_numbers21-05-07-2013_1_1.jpg
  • City workers talk near an art installation entitled 'One Through Zero (The Ten Numbers)' by American pop artist Robert Indiana (b 1928), in Lime Street, City of London.  Situated in the capital's Square Mile, its financial heart, are surrounding offices and corporate headquarters from the finance and insurance sector, most notably being the nearby Lloyds of London building. This series of sculptures is composed of 10 brightly painted numerical digits, each made of aluminum and set on its own base. Their construction took place at the former Lippincott Foundry in North Haven, Connecticut from 1980 to 1983
    city_numbers03-05-07-2013_1_1.jpg
  • On the day that Prime Minister Theresa May meets with Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn in an attempt to break the Brexit deadlock in parliament, pro-EU placards opposite Parliament in Westminster, on 3rd April 2019, in London, England.
    brexit_protest-04-03-04-2019.jpg
  • Covered mannequins, awaiting clothing in a London retail shop window. White covers have been draped over the models in readiness for new clothing to be placed on them by the shop's owner. The lower legs stand on the floor in the window and the upper torsos rest on the ground, awaiting fashionable styles. The retailer is an independent shop off central London's Oxford Street.
    covered_mannequins05-14-01-2016.jpg
  • We see six office workers silhouetted against the large orange wall of the Credit Lyonnais Bank. They rush to work while one figure stands and talks into his mobile phone, at Broadgate in the City of London, UK. Several figures who are also reduced to black shapes and without detail that may identify them or their clothes, are hurrying in different directions, carrying a bag or briefcase but the feeling of rushing business is seen and their scale is ambiguous becase we don't know how close or far away they are from each other. This is due to telephoto lens forshortening. Some therefore look giants and some appear tiny. Broadgate Estate is a large, 32 acre (129,000 m²) office and retail estate in the City of London, owned by British Land and managed by Broadgate Estates. It was originally built by Rosehaugh and was the largest office development in London until the arrival of Canary Wharf in the early 1990s.
    RB-0182.jpg
  • We see two office workers silhouetted against the large orange wall  of the Credit Lyonnais Bank, rushing to work through Broadgate in the City of London, UK. The figures are reduced to black shapes and without detail that may identify them or their clothes, are hurrying in different directions, one is a lady carrying a bag  but the feeling of rushing business is seen and their scale is ambiguous because  we don't know how close or far away they are from each other. The female therefore looks a  giant and the man, tiny. Broadgate Estate is a large, 32 acre (129,000 m²) office and retail estate in the City of London, owned by British Land and managed by Broadgate Estates. It was originally built by Rosehaugh and was the largest office development in London until the arrival of Canary Wharf in the early 1990s.
    RB_078-18-05-1995.jpg
  • City workers pass-by a large number One, part of an art installation entitled 'One Through Zero (The Ten Numbers)' by American pop artist Robert Indiana (b 1928), in Lime Street, City of London, the capital's Square Mile, and its financial heart. Situated in the capital's Square Mile, its financial heart, are surrounding offices and corporate headquarters from the finance and insurance sector, most notably being the nearby Lloyds of London building. This series of sculptures is composed of 10 brightly painted numerical digits, each made of aluminum and set on its own base. Their construction took place at the former Lippincott Foundry in North Haven, Connecticut from 1980 to 1983
    city_numbers16-05-07-2013_1_1.jpg
  • City workers pass-by an art installation entitled 'One Through Zero (The Ten Numbers)' by American pop artist Robert Indiana (b 1928), in Lime Street, City of London, the capital's Square Mile, and its financial heart. Situated in the capital's Square Mile, its financial heart, are surrounding offices and corporate headquarters from the finance and insurance sector, most notably being the nearby Lloyds of London building. This series of sculptures is composed of 10 brightly painted numerical digits, each made of aluminum and set on its own base. Their construction took place at the former Lippincott Foundry in North Haven, Connecticut from 1980 to 1983
    city_numbers12-05-07-2013_1_1.jpg
  • A city worker smokes a cigarette as a woman drinks water next to an art installation entitled 'One Through Zero (The Ten Numbers)' by American pop artist Robert Indiana (b 1928), in Lime Street, City of London, the capital's Square Mile, and its financial heart. Situated in the capital's Square Mile, its financial heart, are surrounding offices and corporate headquarters from the finance and insurance sector, most notably being the nearby Lloyds of London building. This series of sculptures is composed of 10 brightly painted numerical digits, each made of aluminum and set on its own base. Their construction took place at the former Lippincott Foundry in North Haven, Connecticut from 1980 to 1983
    city_numbers05-09-07-2013_1_1.jpg
  • The Lloyds Building and a number two, part of an art installation entitled 'One Through Zero (The Ten Numbers)' by American pop artist Robert Indiana (b 1928), in Lime Street, City of London, the capital's Square Mile, and its financial heart. Situated in the capital's Square Mile, its financial heart, are surrounding offices and corporate headquarters from the finance and insurance sector, most notably being the nearby Lloyds of London building. This series of sculptures is composed of 10 brightly painted numerical digits, each made of aluminum and set on its own base. Their construction took place at the former Lippincott Foundry in North Haven, Connecticut from 1980 to 1983
    city_numbers05-05-07-2013_1_1.jpg
  • A city worker uses his smartphone by an art installation entitled 'One Through Zero (The Ten Numbers)' by American pop artist Robert Indiana (b 1928), in Lime Street, City of London, the capital's Square Mile, and its financial heart. Situated in the capital's Square Mile, its financial heart, are surrounding offices and corporate headquarters from the finance and insurance sector, most notably being the nearby Lloyds of London building. This series of sculptures is composed of 10 brightly painted numerical digits, each made of aluminum and set on its own base. Their construction took place at the former Lippincott Foundry in North Haven, Connecticut from 1980 to 1983
    city_numbers04-05-07-2013_1_1.jpg
  • David Thomas,42, pictured here with his daughter, spends his days producing perfectly proportioned vegetables for supermarkets but in the evening he devotes himself to his hobby growing outsized vegetables. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) spending up to 80 hours a week, tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses. The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb. It’s a competitive business though and global; some times the record may stand for only hours before a fellow competitor, somewhere,  knocks a grower off the coveted spot.
    IMG_2798_1.jpg
  • David Thomas,42, pictured here with his daughter, spends his days producing perfectly proportioned vegetables for supermarkets but in the evening he devotes himself to his hobby growing outsized vegetables. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) spending up to 80 hours a week, tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses. The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb. It’s a competitive business though and global; some times the record may stand for only hours before a fellow competitor, somewhere,  knocks a grower off the coveted spot.
    IMG_2622_1.jpg
  • David Thomas,42, spends his days producing perfectly proportioned vegetables for supermarkets but in the evening he devotes himself to his hobby growing outsized vegetables. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) spending up to 80 hours a week, tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses. The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb. It’s a competitive business though and global; some times the record may stand for only hours before a fellow competitor, somewhere,  knocks a grower off the coveted spot.
    IMG_2808_1.jpg
  • David Thomas,42, spends his days producing perfectly proportioned vegetables for supermarkets but in the evening he devotes himself to his hobby growing outsized vegetables. Giant vegetable growing is not a hobby for the faint hearted. The growers have to tend to the vegetables almost every day (including Christmas) spending up to 80 hours a week, tending, nurturing, growing and spending thousands on fertilisers, electricity and green houses. The reward is to be crowned world record holder of largest, longest or heaviest in class, cabbages weighing in at 100lb, carrots stretching 19 ft and pumpkins tipping the scales at 800lb. It’s a competitive business though and global; some times the record may stand for only hours before a fellow competitor, somewhere,  knocks a grower off the coveted spot.
    IMG_9445_1.jpg
  • Looking up from the ground, we see above our heads some Renaissance frescoes (the painting on the left is of Vienna) that were painted on the ceiling of the first courtyard in Palazzo Vecchia in Florence's Piazza della Signoria. The first courtyard was designed in 1453 by Michelozzo and the frescoes on the walls, representing scenes of the Austrian Habsburg estates, were painted in 1565 by Giorgio Vasari for the wedding celebration of Francesco I de' Medici, the eldest son of Cosimo I de' Medici, and Johanna of Austria, sister of the Emperor Maximilian. The harmoniously proportioned columns, at one time smooth, and untouched, were at the same time richly decorated with gilt stuccoes. Their faded appearance now lends them a quality of fine antiquity.
    florence_italy17-22-10-2010_1.jpg
  • Tuition for students in Henry Thomas lecture theatre at London Metropolitan University's Holloway Road campus. Male and female students are seen together, seated on chairs with table surfaces attached. London Metropolitan University is one of the foremost providers of undergraduate, postgraduate, professional and vocational education and training in Britain. Their courses are planned in consultation with employers and examining bodies in commerce, industry, the world of art and design, the financial services industries and other professions. To compare profiles, Oxford University has the lowest proportion of working-class students, with 11.5%. London Metropolitan University has the greatest proportion, with 57.2%. The first building, designed by Charles Bell, was opened in 1896.
    met_london_university87-02-11-2010.jpg
  • Tuition for students in Henry Thomas lecture theatre at London Metropolitan University's Holloway Road campus. Male and female students talk in the minutes before the lecture starts, seated on chairs with table surfaces attached. London Metropolitan University is one of the foremost providers of undergraduate, postgraduate, professional and vocational education and training in Britain. Their courses are planned in consultation with employers and examining bodies in commerce, industry, the world of art and design, the financial services industries and other professions. To compare profiles, Oxford University has the lowest proportion of working-class students, with 11.5%. London Metropolitan University has the greatest proportion, with 57.2%. The first building, designed by Charles Bell, was opened in 1896.
    met_london_university82-02-11-2010.jpg
  • Young men study at workstations in communal area at London Metropilitan University's Holloway Road campus. London Metropolitan University is one of the foremost providers of undergraduate, postgraduate, professional and vocational education and training in Britain. Their courses are planned in consultation with employers and examining bodies in commerce, industry, the world of art and design, the financial services industries and other professions. To compare profiles, Oxford University has the lowest proportion of working-class students, with 11.5%. London Metropolitan University has the greatest proportion, with 57.2%. The first building, designed by Charles Bell, was opened in 1896.
    met_london_university74-02-11-2010.jpg
  • Young students walk past the exterior of the Daniel Libeskind designed London Metropolitan University's modern Graduate Centre. Hurrying on to their next lecture, young women and a male friend chat enthusiastically passing the polished surfaces. London Metropolitan University is one of the foremost providers of undergraduate, postgraduate, professional and vocational education and training in Britain. Their courses are planned in consultation with employers and examining bodies in commerce, industry, the world of art and design, the financial services industries and other professions. To compare profiles, Oxford University has the lowest proportion of working-class students, with 11.5%. London Metropolitan University has the greatest proportion, with 57.2%. The first building, designed by Charles Bell, was opened in 1896.
    met_london_university11-02-11-2010.jpg
  • Tuition for students in Henry Thomas lecture theatre at London Metropolitan University's Holloway Road campus. Male and female students are seen together, seated on chairs with table surfaces attached. London Metropolitan University is one of the foremost providers of undergraduate, postgraduate, professional and vocational education and training in Britain. Their courses are planned in consultation with employers and examining bodies in commerce, industry, the world of art and design, the financial services industries and other professions. To compare profiles, Oxford University has the lowest proportion of working-class students, with 11.5%. London Metropolitan University has the greatest proportion, with 57.2%. The first building, designed by Charles Bell, was opened in 1896.
    met_london_university93-02-11-2010.jpg
  • The purple corporate logo on lecture threatre carpet of London Metropolitan University's Holloway Road. A lecturer is seen in the distance, speaking to an unseen audience of students, hearing her talk about marketing and branding. London Metropolitan University is one of the foremost providers of undergraduate, postgraduate, professional and vocational education and training in Britain. Their courses are planned in consultation with employers and examining bodies in commerce, industry, the world of art and design, the financial services industries and other professions. To compare profiles, Oxford University has the lowest proportion of working-class students, with 11.5%. London Metropolitan University has the greatest proportion, with 57.2%. The first building, designed by Charles Bell, was opened in 1896.
    met_london_university92-02-11-2010.jpg
  • Tuition for students in Henry Thomas lecture theatre at London Metropolitan University's Holloway Road campus. Male and female students are seen together, seated on chairs with table surfaces attached. London Metropolitan University is one of the foremost providers of undergraduate, postgraduate, professional and vocational education and training in Britain. Their courses are planned in consultation with employers and examining bodies in commerce, industry, the world of art and design, the financial services industries and other professions. To compare profiles, Oxford University has the lowest proportion of working-class students, with 11.5%. London Metropolitan University has the greatest proportion, with 57.2%. The first building, designed by Charles Bell, was opened in 1896.
    met_london_university90-02-11-2010.jpg
  • Young men study at workstations in communal area at London Metropilitan University's Holloway Road campus. While one taps numbers on a calculator, another writes up course notes. London Metropolitan University is one of the foremost providers of undergraduate, postgraduate, professional and vocational education and training in Britain. Their courses are planned in consultation with employers and examining bodies in commerce, industry, the world of art and design, the financial services industries and other professions. To compare profiles, Oxford University has the lowest proportion of working-class students, with 11.5%. London Metropolitan University has the greatest proportion, with 57.2%. The first building, designed by Charles Bell, was opened in 1896.
    met_london_university67-02-11-2010.jpg
  • Two students study outside at London Metropolitan University's Holloway Road campus. Writing up notes and reading course work, the two young men sit on wooden steps with other students. London Metropolitan University is one of the foremost providers of undergraduate, postgraduate, professional and vocational education and training in Britain. Their courses are planned in consultation with employers and examining bodies in commerce, industry, the world of art and design, the financial services industries and other professions. To compare profiles, Oxford University has the lowest proportion of working-class students, with 11.5%. London Metropolitan University has the greatest proportion, with 57.2%. The first building, designed by Charles Bell, was opened in 1896.
    met_london_university62-02-11-2010.jpg
  • A sign stuck to a door showing where a Motivation and Confidence seminar is located inside London Metropolitan University's Holloway Road campus. London Metropolitan University is one of the foremost providers of undergraduate, postgraduate, professional and vocational education and training in Britain. Their courses are planned in consultation with employers and examining bodies in commerce, industry, the world of art and design, the financial services industries and other professions. To compare profiles, Oxford University has the lowest proportion of working-class students, with 11.5%. London Metropolitan University has the greatest proportion, with 57.2%. The first building, designed by Charles Bell, was opened in 1896.
    met_london_university58-02-11-2010.jpg
  • Young man studies at workstation in communal area at London Metropilitan University's Holloway Road campus. The male taps numbers on a calculator while others lounge around in the background. London Metropolitan University is one of the foremost providers of undergraduate, postgraduate, professional and vocational education and training in Britain. Their courses are planned in consultation with employers and examining bodies in commerce, industry, the world of art and design, the financial services industries and other professions. To compare profiles, Oxford University has the lowest proportion of working-class students, with 11.5%. London Metropolitan University has the greatest proportion, with 57.2%. The first building, designed by Charles Bell, was opened in 1896.
    met_london_university75-02-11-2010.jpg
  • Rowing boat travelling along the River Stour at Flatford. John Constable the painter was born here and is known principally for his landscape paintings of Dedham Vale, the area surrounding his home—now known as Constable Country—which he invested with an intensity of affection. I should paint my own places best, he wrote to his friend John Fisher in 1821, painting is but another word for feeling.<br />
From his youth he made trips in the surrounding Suffolk and Essex countryside, which was to become the subject of a large proportion of his art. These scenes, in his own words, made me a painter, and I am grateful; the sound of water escaping from mill dams etc., willows, old rotten planks, slimy posts, and brickwork, I love such things., on 29th October 2016, in East Bergholt, Suffolk, England.
    _E6A3290_1.jpg
  • Cows feeding in the meadows adjoining the River Stour at Flatford. John Constable the painter was born here and is known principally for his landscape paintings of Dedham Vale, the area surrounding his home—now known as Constable Country—which he invested with an intensity of affection. I should paint my own places best, he wrote to his friend John Fisher in 1821, painting is but another word for feeling. From his youth he made trips in the surrounding Suffolk and Essex countryside, which was to become the subject of a large proportion of his art. These scenes, in his own words, made me a painter, and I am grateful; the sound of water escaping from mill dams etc., willows, old rotten planks, slimy posts, and brickwork, I love such things. 29th October 2016, in East Bergholt, Suffolk, England.
    _E6A3273_1.jpg
  • Cows feeding in the meadows adjoining the River Stour at Flatford. John Constable the painter was born here and is known principally for his landscape paintings of Dedham Vale, the area surrounding his home—now known as Constable Country—which he invested with an intensity of affection. I should paint my own places best, he wrote to his friend John Fisher in 1821, painting is but another word for feeling.<br />
From his youth he made trips in the surrounding Suffolk and Essex countryside, which was to become the subject of a large proportion of his art. These scenes, in his own words, made me a painter, and I am grateful; the sound of water escaping from mill dams etc., willows, old rotten planks, slimy posts, and brickwork, I love such things. 29th October 2016, in East Bergholt, Suffolk, England.
    _E6A3272_1.jpg
  • A students bicycle parked on a Cambridge street, Cambridge University, Cambridge, United Kingdom. Cambridge has a very high proportion of trips by bike because it is a university city.
    SFE_130708_083.jpg
  • Actresses Imelda Staunton and Jodie Whittaker launch Action Aid’s International Safe Cities for Women Day at Marble Arch, with an interactive exhibition featuring a group of 30 mannequins on May 19, 2016 in London, United Kingdom. A third of the mannequins featured in the installation will be marked in red, to represent the one in three women who experience violence in their lifetimes. But behind every statistic is a real woman, and on each mannequin are quotes from women around the world telling their experience of urban violence and the stories behind the statistics. ActionAid is campaigning for the UK government to commit to increasing the proportion of aid going directly to women’s groups working on the frontline in poor communities.
    16-ActionAid-SafeCities-8452_1.jpg
  • Action Aid’s International Safe Cities for Women Day at Marble Arch, with an interactive exhibition featuring a group of 30 mannequins on May 19, 2016 in London, United Kingdom. A third of the mannequins featured in the installation will be marked in red, to represent the one in three women who experience violence in their lifetimes. But behind every statistic is a real woman, and on each mannequin are quotes from women around the world telling their experience of urban violence and the stories behind the statistics. ActionAid is campaigning for the UK government to commit to increasing the proportion of aid going directly to women’s groups working on the frontline in poor communities.
    16-ActionAid-SafeCities-8196_1.jpg
  • Action Aid’s International Safe Cities for Women Day at Marble Arch, with an interactive exhibition featuring a group of 30 mannequins on May 19, 2016 in London, United Kingdom. A third of the mannequins featured in the installation will be marked in red, to represent the one in three women who experience violence in their lifetimes. But behind every statistic is a real woman, and on each mannequin are quotes from women around the world telling their experience of urban violence and the stories behind the statistics. ActionAid is campaigning for the UK government to commit to increasing the proportion of aid going directly to women’s groups working on the frontline in poor communities.
    16-ActionAid-SafeCities-0014_1.jpg
  • Seen from Colle-Kohlern, a high location above northern Italian south Tyrolean city of Bozen-Bolzano, we see a signpost that tells drivers and hikers that the city is 9km away. Pointing downhill, the road snakes towards the bottom of the cable car lift. Written in both German and Italian, German speakers make up the largest proportion of the south Tyrol population. This is also the only region in Italy where the majority of the population speaks German as their mother tongue and so it's officially bi-lingual, including all road signs, menus and media,
    bolzano_italy16-11-07-2015_1.jpg
  • Illegally hunted deer meat for sale at the local market in the Khmu ethnic minority village of Ban Na Mon, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash.
    DSCF4749cc_1.jpg
  • 'Nor Bong' bamboo shoot collected from the forest and sold at the roadside market in the Tai Dam village of Ban Na Mor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A0017180cc_1.jpg
  • Wrapped leaves containing white mushrooms (het khao) collected from the wild and sold at the roadside market in the Tai Dam village of Ban Na Mor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A0017179cc_1.jpg
  • Pak koud (fern) collected from the wild and sold by Ko Pala women at the market in Pak Nam Noi, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash.
    A0017160cc_1.jpg
  • 'Nor khom', bitter bamboo shoot collected from the forest and sold at the roadside market in the Tai Dam village of Ban Na Mor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A0015469_1.jpg
  • Bitter bamboo shoots (nor khom) collected from the forest and sold at the roadside market in the Tai Dam village of Ban Na Mor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A0013512_1.jpg
  • Mushrooms (het tamoad) collected from the forest and sold at the roadside market in the Tai Dam village of Ban Na Mor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A0013509_1.jpg
  • Dried rats (nou hang) for sale at the roadside market in the Tai Dam ethnic minority village of Ban Na Mor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A0013503_1.jpg
  • Wild birds for sale in the roadside market, in the Tai Dam ethnic minority village of Ban Na Mor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A0013483_1.jpg
  • Rat (nou noy) for sale in the roadside market in the Tai Dam ethnic minority village of Ban Na Mor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A0013479_1.jpg
  • Eel for sale at the roadside market in the Tai Dam ethnic minority village of Ban Na Mor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A0010665_1.jpg
  • Stag beetles collected from the wild and sold at the roadside market in the Tai Dam village of Ban Na Mor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A0010632_1.jpg
  • A stag beetle collected from the wild and sold at the roadside market in the Tai Dam village of Ban Na Mor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A0010630_1.jpg
  • Mak kor, a kind of nut collected from the forest and sold at the roadside market in the Tai Dam village of Ban Na Mor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A0010602_1.jpg
  • Rattan collected from the forest and sold at a Hmong ethnic minority roadside market in Vientiane province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash.
    A0009879-84v2_1.jpg
  • 'Pak Elerd', a green leafy vegetable for sale at the roadside market in the Tai Dam village of Ban Na Mor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A_17241cc_1.jpg
  • Nor Lan (bamboo shoots) collected from the forest and sold at the roadside market in the Tai Dam village of Ban Na Mor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A_17232cc_1.jpg
  • Bee larvae collected from the forest, cooked in a banana leaf and sold at the roadside market in the Tai Dam village of Ban Na Mor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A_17220cc_1.jpg
  • Bee larvae collected from the forest, cooked in a banana leaf and sold at the roadside market in the Tai Dam village of Ban Na Mor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A_17217cc_1.jpg
  • 'Mak Man' fruit collected from the forest and sold at the roadside market in the Tai Dam village of Ban Na Mor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A_17213cc_1.jpg
  • Pak Nao, a type of green leafy vegetable, collected from the wild and sold at the roadside market in the Tai Dam village of Ban Na Mor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A_17208cc_1.jpg
  • Pak Koud, a type of fern, collected from the wild and sold at the roadside market in the Tai Dam village of Ban Na Mor,Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A_17207cc_1.jpg
  • A bundle of dried fish for sale at Muang Sing market, Luang Namtha province, Lao PDR. The catching of small birds and fish, frogs and crabs still forms an important routine for village people. In the past, the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used to feed the family, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash.
    A 5741_1_1.jpg
  • A child carrying a glass bottle at dawn at the Movimentodos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem Terra camp, near Iguacu, Brazil. The MST carries out land reform in a country mired by unjust land distribution. In Brazil, a tiny proportion of landowners control roughly half of agricultural land: just 3% of the population owns two-thirds of all arable lands. Since 1985, the MST have occupied unused land where they have established cooperative farms, houses, schools and clinics.
    SFE_990601_0010.jpg
  • A man and his horse on the sqatted land in the Movimentodos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem Terra camp, near Iguacu, Brazil. The MST carries out land reform in a country mired by unjust land distribution. In Brazil, a tiny proportion of landowners control roughly half of agricultural land: just 3% of the population owns two-thirds of all arable lands. Since 1985, the MST have occupied unused land where they have established cooperative farms, houses, schools and clinics.
    SFE_990601_0009.jpg
  • A mother, her son and their dog, pose in their shack in the Movimentodos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem Terra camp, near Iguacu, Brazil. The MST carries out land reform in a country mired by unjust land distribution. In Brazil, a tiny proportion of landowners control roughly half of agricultural land: just 3% of the population owns two-thirds of all arable lands. Since 1985, the MST have occupied unused land where they have established cooperative farms, houses, schools and clinics.
    SFE_990601_0007.jpg
  • Morning sunlight at the Movimentodos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem Terra camp, near Iguacu, Brazil. The MST carries out land reform in a country mired by unjust land distribution. In Brazil, a tiny proportion of landowners control roughly half of agricultural land: just 3% of the population owns two-thirds of all arable lands. Since 1985, the MST have occupied unused land where they have established cooperative farms, houses, schools and clinics.
    SFE_990601_0003.jpg
  • A child walks through the Movimentodos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem Terra camp, near Iguacu, Brazil. The MST carries out land reform in a country mired by unjust land distribution. In Brazil, a tiny proportion of landowners control roughly half of agricultural land: just 3% of the population owns two-thirds of all arable lands. Since 1985, the MST have occupied unused land where they have established cooperative farms, houses, schools and clinics.
    SFE_990601_0001.jpg
  • A team of English tea-tasters employed by the tea company Lyons sample different blends for the PG Tips brand in the City of London, England UK. With variously-sourced teas from tea estate plantations, they smell, touch, sip, slurp then spit the hot drink out into a spittoon rather than swallow it many times repeatedly. Britons drink 35 million cups of PG Tips a day and world tea production is approximately 3.2 million tonnes a year. Kenya is the largest producer with Sri Lanka a close second. PG Tips is imported as single estate teas from around the world and blended in precise proportions set by the tea tasters to make blend 777, which can contain between 12 and 35 single estate teas at any one time depending on season.
    tea_tasting-14-02-1993_1_1.jpg
  • A female London Fire Brigade firefighter talks to the Sector Commander during an emergency response to an explosion on the basement of a shop in North London, United Kingdom. The London Fire Brigade is the 4th largest fire-service in the world.  As of 2012, there were 257 female firefighters in the London Fire Brigade.  As of March 2007, the proportion of operational firefighters in the UK who were women was 3.1%.
    UK-Emergency-Services-Fire-Brigade-7...jpg
  • Cows feeding in the meadows adjoining the River Stour at Flatford. John Constable the painter was born here and is known principally for his landscape paintings of Dedham Vale, the area surrounding his home—now known as Constable Country—which he invested with an intensity of affection. I should paint my own places best, he wrote to his friend John Fisher in 1821, painting is but another word for feeling.<br />
From his youth he made trips in the surrounding Suffolk and Essex countryside, which was to become the subject of a large proportion of his art. These scenes, in his own words, made me a painter, and I am grateful; the sound of water escaping from mill dams etc., willows, old rotten planks, slimy posts, and brickwork, I love such things. 29th October 2016, in East Bergholt, Suffolk, England.
    _E6A3267_1.jpg
  • Water reflections on the River Stour at Flatford in East Bergholt, Suffolk, England. <br />
John Constable the painter was born here and is known principally for his landscape paintings of Dedham Vale, the area surrounding his home—now known as Constable Country—which he invested with an intensity of affection. I should paint my own places best, he wrote to his friend John Fisher in 1821, painting is but another word for feeling.<br />
From his youth he made trips in the surrounding Suffolk and Essex countryside, which was to become the subject of a large proportion of his art. These scenes, in his own words, made me a painter, and I am grateful; the sound of water escaping from mill dams etc., willows, old rotten planks, slimy posts, and brickwork, I love such things.
    _E6A3215_1.jpg
  • A students bicycle parked on a Cambridge street, Cambridge University, Cambridge, United Kingdom. Cambridge has a very high proportion of trips by bike because it is a university city.
    SFE_130708_094.jpg
  • Actresses Imelda Staunton and Jodie Whittaker launch Action Aid’s International Safe Cities for Women Day at Marble Arch, with an interactive exhibition featuring a group of 30 mannequins on May 19, 2016 in London, United Kingdom. A third of the mannequins featured in the installation will be marked in red, to represent the one in three women who experience violence in their lifetimes. But behind every statistic is a real woman, and on each mannequin are quotes from women around the world telling their experience of urban violence and the stories behind the statistics. ActionAid is campaigning for the UK government to commit to increasing the proportion of aid going directly to women’s groups working on the frontline in poor communities.
    16-ActionAid-SafeCities-8368_1.jpg
  • Actresses Imelda Staunton and Jodie Whittaker launch Action Aid’s International Safe Cities for Women Day at Marble Arch, with an interactive exhibition featuring a group of 30 mannequins on May 19, 2016 in London, United Kingdom. A third of the mannequins featured in the installation will be marked in red, to represent the one in three women who experience violence in their lifetimes. But behind every statistic is a real woman, and on each mannequin are quotes from women around the world telling their experience of urban violence and the stories behind the statistics. ActionAid is campaigning for the UK government to commit to increasing the proportion of aid going directly to women’s groups working on the frontline in poor communities.
    16-ActionAid-SafeCities-0032_1.jpg
  • A hybrid Ford Escape Hybrid taxi cab passes the tall doorway of the East River Savings Bank in Lower Manhattan, New York City. Stopped at a red light before continuing its silent journey across the city. The City Council passed a bill in 2003 requiring the New York City Taxi and Limousine Commission to set aside a proportion of new taxi medallions to be granted to vehicles that use cleaner fuels. By uly 2011, New York City had 4,980 hybrid taxis, representing almost 38% of the city's overall fleet,[20] and about 6,000 by September 2012, representing 45% of the taxis in service.
    manhattan_buildings02-25-05-2014_1.jpg
  • Dried bamboo shoot from the Akha Cherpia village of Ban Sano Kao, Phongsaly Province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash.
    A0019999cc_1.jpg
  • 'Het Khao', white mushrooms collected from the wild and sold at the roadside market in the Tai Dam village of Ban Na Mor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A0017192cc_1.jpg
  • 'Nor Lan' (bamboo shoots) collected from the forest and sold at the roadside market in the Tai Dam village of Ban Na Mor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A0017190cc_1.jpg
  • Pak koud (fern) collected from the wild and sold by Ko Pala women at the market in Pak Nam Noi, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash.
    A0017161cc_1.jpg
  • Squirrel for sale in the roadside market, in the Tai Dam ethnic minority village of Ban Na Mor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A0013519_1.jpg
  • Mak kou, a kind of nut collected from the forest and sold at the roadside market in the Tai Dam village of Ban Na Mor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A0013507_1.jpg
  • Rattan (nor way) collected from the forest and sold at the roadside market in the Tai Dam village of Ban Na Mor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A0013497_1.jpg
  • Wild birds for sale in the roadside market, in the Tai Dam ethnic minority village of Ban Na Mor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A0013482_1.jpg
  • Mak kouk, a kind of fruit collected from the forest and sold at the roadside market in the Tai Dam village of Ban Na Mor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A0011022_1.jpg
  • Dried bamboo shoots (nor hang) for sale at the roadside market in the Tai Dam ethnic minority village of Ban Na Mor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A0010667_1.jpg
  • Bamboo rat (nou phouk) for sale at the roadside market in the Tai Dam ethnic minority village of Ban Na Mor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A0010653_1.jpg
  • Dried frogs (khied hang) for sale at the roadside market in the Tai Dam ethnic minority village of Ban Na Mor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A0010644_1.jpg
  • A bird's nest (used for home decoration) for sale at the roadside market in the Tai Dam village of Ban Na Mor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A0010633_1.jpg
  • Bitter bamboo shoot (nor khom) collected from the forest and sold at a Hmong ethnic minority market in Vientiane province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash.
    A0009648_1.jpg
  • 'Mak Kheng' fruit collected from the forest and sold at the roadside market in the Tai Dam village of Ban Na Mor, Oudomxay province, Lao PDR. In the past the bulk of products collected or caught from the wild were used for family consumption, but nowadays a substantial proportion of products are sold in the markets for cash. Ban Na Mor market is ideally situated on route 13 which goes to the border with China allowing them to take advantage of the many Chinese tour buses and businessmen passing through.
    A_17216cc_1.jpg
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