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  • Men relax and bathe in Chemberlitas baths, Instanbul, Turkey.
    cp_tur_0205_1.jpg
  • A couple relax and enjoy the sounds from the Lake of Stars music festival in  Chinteche town , Malawi.
    20071007_malawi_ubuntu_0100-3_1.jpg
  • Families relaxing at Gasa tsachhu (hot springs) in Jigme Dorji National Park, Western Bhutan. At Gasa hot springs there are five pools with water temperature ranging from mild to extremely hot. During the winter months when farming work is done, families from all over Bhutan come here to relax in the restorative pools for many days.
    A0028626cc_1.jpg
  • Families relaxing at Gasa tsachhu (hot springs) in Jigme Dorji National Park, Western Bhutan. At Gasa hot springs there are five pools with water temperature ranging from mild to extremely hot. During the winter months when farming work is done, families from all over Bhutan come here to relax in the restorative pools for many days.
    A0028631cc_1.jpg
  • Women relaxing at Gasa tsachhu (hot springs) in Jigme Dorji National Park, Western Bhutan. At Gasa hot springs there are five pools with water temperature ranging from mild to extremely hot. During the winter months when farming work is done, families from all over Bhutan come here to relax in the restorative pools for many days.
    A0028637cc_1.jpg
  • Families relaxing at Gasa tsachhu (hot springs) in Jigme Dorji National Park, Western Bhutan. At Gasa hot springs there are five pools with water temperature ranging from mild to extremely hot. During the winter months when farming work is done, families from all over Bhutan come here to relax in the restorative pools for many days.
    A0028625cc_1.jpg
  • Woman takes the weight off her feet to relax in an armchair which has been abandoned on the street in Earls Court, London, UK. Laughing at the weirdness of the street scene as people pass by.
    20141019_woman in sofa chair_B.jpg
  • Woman takes the weight off her feet to relax in an armchair which has been abandoned on the street in Earls Court, London, UK. Laughing at the weirdness of the street scene as people pass by.
    20141019_woman in sofa chair_C.jpg
  • Woman takes the weight off her feet to relax in an armchair which has been abandoned on the street in Earls Court, London, UK. Laughing at the weirdness of the street scene.
    20141019_woman in sofa chair_A.jpg
  • Three young people relax underneath a poster advertising a show by the artist, Tracy Emin by the Nationa Film Theatre on the South Bank, London, UK
    SFE_110819_095.jpg
  • Two friends in costume sit and relax on the grass at  the Standon Calling Festival in Hertfordshire, UK.<br />
Standon Calling is a small independent festival set among the hills in Herfordshire that showcases World Music, Indie Music and dance Music. It is one of the new, small and quirky boutique festivals which have become popular in the UK.
    SFE_110813_151.jpg
  • City workers relax during lunchtime outside St Botolph's Church Hall. Originally an infants' school, St Botolph's Church Hall stands in the churchyard of the Church of St Botolph-without-Bishopsgate. The entrance to the hall is flanked by two Coade stone statues of a schoolboy and schoolgirl wearing 19th century costume. The original Saxon church, the foundations of which were discovered when the present church was erected, is first mentioned as ‘Sancti Botolfi Extra Bishopesgate’ in 1212. St. Botolph without Bishopsgate may have survived the Great Fire of London unscathed, and only lost one window in the Second World War, but on 24 April 1993 was one of the many buildings to be damaged by an IRA bomb.
    st_botolphs_chapel02-08-10-2013_1_1.jpg
  • City workers relax during lunchtime outside St Botolph's Church Hall. Originally an infants' school, St Botolph's Church Hall stands in the churchyard of the Church of St Botolph-without-Bishopsgate. The entrance to the hall is flanked by two Coade stone statues of a schoolboy and schoolgirl wearing 19th century costume. The original Saxon church, the foundations of which were discovered when the present church was erected, is first mentioned as ‘Sancti Botolfi Extra Bishopesgate’ in 1212. St. Botolph without Bishopsgate may have survived the Great Fire of London unscathed, and only lost one window in the Second World War, but on 24 April 1993 was one of the many buildings to be damaged by an IRA bomb.
    city_people06-08-10-2013_1.jpg
  • Office workers gather yto relax in the sunshine at lunchtime in Soho Square (also known as Soho Beach) in central London. Home of London's gay community.
    _MG_3375.jpg
  • Office workers gather yto relax in the sunshine at lunchtime in Soho Square (also known as Soho Beach) in central London. Home of London's gay community.
    _MG_3372.jpg
  • Office workers gather yto relax in the sunshine at lunchtime in Soho Square (also known as Soho Beach) in central London. Home of London's gay community.
    _MG_3367.jpg
  • Office workers gather yto relax in the sunshine at lunchtime in Soho Square (also known as Soho Beach) in central London. Home of London's gay community.
    _MG_3362.jpg
  • Laos is the most bombed country, per capita, in the world with more than 270 million cluster bomb submunitions dropped on it during the Vietnam War from 1963 to 1974. The Mines Advisory Group (MAG) are a humanitarian organisation clearing the remnants of conflict worldwide and have been working in Lao PDR since 1994. UXO clearance team 6 (UCT6) is an all-female team, one of MAG’s seven UXO clearance teams in Xieng Khouang Province, one of the most heavily bombed province in Lao PDR.  UCT6 team leader, Manixia Thor and a technician relax after work at the camp. MAG provides a permanent camp for each clearance team so that members can stay together during their three weeks on site.
    A0012132cc_1_1.jpg
  • Four men relax in a heated swimming pool during the Winter at Spa Hotel Rauhalahti, Kuopio, Central Finland.
    A_7679_1.jpg
  • Office workers gather yto relax in the sunshine at lunchtime in Soho Square (also known as Soho Beach) in central London. Home of London's gay community.
    _MG_3377.jpg
  • Office workers gather yto relax in the sunshine at lunchtime in Soho Square (also known as Soho Beach) in central London. Home of London's gay community.
    _MG_3360.jpg
  • Three men relax in a heated swimming pool in the summer at Spa Hotel Rauhalahti, Kuopio, Central Finland.
    32-05_1.jpg
  • London; English; England; Britain; British; UK; United; Kingdom; Michael; Mike; Kemp; Olympics; Olympic; Park; Games; 2012; crowd; crowds; fans; landscaping; relax; sleep; sleeping.
    20120731olympic park crowds live scr...jpg
  • London; English; England; Britain; British; UK; United; Kingdom; Michael; Mike; Kemp; Olympics; Olympic; Park; Games; 2012; crowd; crowds; fans; landscaping; relax; sleep; sleeping.
    20120731olympic park crowds live scr...jpg
  • The British Museum, London. Visitors relax outside by the dramatic tall columns.
    20090806British MuseumAS.jpg
  • Man relaxing in a chair in the doorway to his shop. Rangoon, Burma 2001
    MAA-021122.001_1.jpg
  • A member of the Serpentine Swimming Club stretches before going swimming in the lake, Hyde Park, London, UK. The Serpentine Lake is situated in Hyde Park, London’s largest central open space. The Serpentine Swimming Club was formed in 1864 ‘to promote the healthful habit of bathing in open water throughout the year’.  Its headquarters were beneath an old elm tree on the south side of the lake, a wooden bench for clothing being the only facility.  At this time London was undergoing rapid expansion and Hyde Park was now in the centre of a densely populated built up area and provided a place of relaxation to its urbanised masses. Now, the club has its own (somewhat spartan) changing facilities and members are  permitted by the Royal Parks to swim in the lake any morning before 09:30.  They race every Saturday morning throughout the year, regardless of the weather.
    A_8750_1.jpg
  • A pink towel and a pair of flip flops belonging to a member of the Serpentine Swimming Club, Hyde Park, London, UK. The Serpentine Lake is situated in Hyde Park, London’s largest central open space. The Serpentine Swimming Club was formed in 1864 ‘to promote the healthful habit of bathing in open water throughout the year’.  Its headquarters were beneath an old elm tree on the south side of the lake, a wooden bench for clothing being the only facility.  At this time London was undergoing rapid expansion and Hyde Park was now in the centre of a densely populated built up area and provided a place of relaxation to its urbanised masses. Now, the club has its own (somewhat spartan) changing facilities and members are  permitted by the Royal Parks to swim in the lake any morning before 09:30.  They race every Saturday morning throughout the year, regardless of the weather.
    A_8743_1.jpg
  • The start of the Serpentine Swimming Club Saturday morning swimming race, Hyde Park, London, UK. The Serpentine Lake is situated in Hyde Park, London’s largest central open space. The Serpentine Swimming Club was formed in 1864 ‘to promote the healthful habit of bathing in open water throughout the year’.  Its headquarters were beneath an old elm tree on the south side of the lake, a wooden bench for clothing being the only facility.  At this time London was undergoing rapid expansion and Hyde Park was now in the centre of a densely populated built up area and provided a place of relaxation to its urbanised masses. Now, the club has its own (somewhat spartan) changing facilities and members are  permitted by the Royal Parks to swim in the lake any morning before 09:30.  They race every Saturday morning throughout the year, regardless of the weather.
    SSC_0017_1.jpg
  • The start of the Serpentine Swimming Club Saturday morning swimming race, Hyde Park, London, UK. The Serpentine Lake is situated in Hyde Park, London’s largest central open space. The Serpentine Swimming Club was formed in 1864 ‘to promote the healthful habit of bathing in open water throughout the year’.  Its headquarters were beneath an old elm tree on the south side of the lake, a wooden bench for clothing being the only facility.  At this time London was undergoing rapid expansion and Hyde Park was now in the centre of a densely populated built up area and provided a place of relaxation to its urbanised masses. Now, the club has its own (somewhat spartan) changing facilities and members are  permitted by the Royal Parks to swim in the lake any morning before 09:30.  They race every Saturday morning throughout the year, regardless of the weather.
    SSC_0020_1.jpg
  • Emmi Hunte, a member of the Serpentine Swimming Club, Hyde Park, London, UK. The Serpentine Lake is situated in Hyde Park, London’s largest central open space. The Serpentine Swimming Club was formed in 1864 ‘to promote the healthful habit of bathing in open water throughout the year’.  Its headquarters were beneath an old elm tree on the south side of the lake, a wooden bench for clothing being the only facility.  At this time London was undergoing rapid expansion and Hyde Park was now in the centre of a densely populated built up area and provided a place of relaxation to its urbanised masses. Now, the club has its own (somewhat spartan) changing facilities and members are  permitted by the Royal Parks to swim in the lake any morning before 09:30.  They race every Saturday morning throughout the year, regardless of the weather.
    SSC_0011_1.jpg
  • The start of the Serpentine Swimming Club Saturday morning swimming race, Hyde Park, London, UK. The Serpentine Lake is situated in Hyde Park, London’s largest central open space. The Serpentine Swimming Club was formed in 1864 ‘to promote the healthful habit of bathing in open water throughout the year’.  Its headquarters were beneath an old elm tree on the south side of the lake, a wooden bench for clothing being the only facility.  At this time London was undergoing rapid expansion and Hyde Park was now in the centre of a densely populated built up area and provided a place of relaxation to its urbanised masses. Now, the club has its own (somewhat spartan) changing facilities and members are  permitted by the Royal Parks to swim in the lake any morning before 09:30.  They race every Saturday morning throughout the year, regardless of the weather.
    SSC_0018_1.jpg
  • The start of the Serpentine Swimming Club Saturday morning swimming race, Hyde Park, London, UK. The Serpentine Lake is situated in Hyde Park, London’s largest central open space. The Serpentine Swimming Club was formed in 1864 ‘to promote the healthful habit of bathing in open water throughout the year’.  Its headquarters were beneath an old elm tree on the south side of the lake, a wooden bench for clothing being the only facility.  At this time London was undergoing rapid expansion and Hyde Park was now in the centre of a densely populated built up area and provided a place of relaxation to its urbanised masses. Now, the club has its own (somewhat spartan) changing facilities and members are  permitted by the Royal Parks to swim in the lake any morning before 09:30.  They race every Saturday morning throughout the year, regardless of the weather.
    SSC_0016_1.jpg
  • Emmi Hunte, a member of the Serpentine Swimming Club, takes a shower after swimming in the Serpentine Lake, Hyde Park, London, UK. The Serpentine Lake is situated in Hyde Park, London’s largest central open space. The Serpentine Swimming Club was formed in 1864 ‘to promote the healthful habit of bathing in open water throughout the year’.  Its headquarters were beneath an old elm tree on the south side of the lake, a wooden bench for clothing being the only facility.  At this time London was undergoing rapid expansion and Hyde Park was now in the centre of a densely populated built up area and provided a place of relaxation to its urbanised masses. Now, the club has its own (somewhat spartan) changing facilities and members are  permitted by the Royal Parks to swim in the lake any morning before 09:30.  They race every Saturday morning throughout the year, regardless of the weather.
    SSC_0012_1.jpg
  • A member of the Serpentine Swimming Club takes a shower after swimming in the Serpentine Lake on a cold Winter day, Hyde Park, London, UK. The Serpentine Lake is situated in Hyde Park, London’s largest central open space. The Serpentine Swimming Club was formed in 1864 ‘to promote the healthful habit of bathing in open water throughout the year’.  Its headquarters were beneath an old elm tree on the south side of the lake, a wooden bench for clothing being the only facility.  At this time London was undergoing rapid expansion and Hyde Park was now in the centre of a densely populated built up area and provided a place of relaxation to its urbanised masses. Now, the club has its own (somewhat spartan) changing facilities and members are  permitted by the Royal Parks to swim in the lake any morning before 09:30.  They race every Saturday morning throughout the year, regardless of the weather.
    SSC_0007_1.jpg
  • Portrait of George Cselko a member of the Serpentine Swimming Club, Hyde Park, London, UK. The Serpentine Lake is situated in Hyde Park, London’s largest central open space. The Serpentine Swimming Club was formed in 1864 ‘to promote the healthful habit of bathing in open water throughout the year’.  Its headquarters were beneath an old elm tree on the south side of the lake, a wooden bench for clothing being the only facility.  At this time London was undergoing rapid expansion and Hyde Park was now in the centre of a densely populated built up area and provided a place of relaxation to its urbanised masses. Now, the club has its own (somewhat spartan) changing facilities and members are  permitted by the Royal Parks to swim in the lake any morning before 09:30.  They race every Saturday morning throughout the year, regardless of the weather.
    SCC_0096_1.jpg
  • Portrait of Ian Studdart, a member of the Serpentine Swimming Club, Hyde Park, London, UK. The Serpentine Lake is situated in Hyde Park, London’s largest central open space. The Serpentine Swimming Club was formed in 1864 ‘to promote the healthful habit of bathing in open water throughout the year’.  Its headquarters were beneath an old elm tree on the south side of the lake, a wooden bench for clothing being the only facility.  At this time London was undergoing rapid expansion and Hyde Park was now in the centre of a densely populated built up area and provided a place of relaxation to its urbanised masses. Now, the club has its own (somewhat spartan) changing facilities and members are  permitted by the Royal Parks to swim in the lake any morning before 09:30.  They race every Saturday morning throughout the year, regardless of the weather.
    SCC_0092_1.jpg
  • Mary Olivari, a member of the Serpentine Swimming Club, swims in the Serpentine Lake, Hyde Park, London, UK. The Serpentine Lake is situated in Hyde Park, London’s largest central open space. The Serpentine Swimming Club was formed in 1864 ‘to promote the healthful habit of bathing in open water throughout the year’.  Its headquarters were beneath an old elm tree on the south side of the lake, a wooden bench for clothing being the only facility.  At this time London was undergoing rapid expansion and Hyde Park was now in the centre of a densely populated built up area and provided a place of relaxation to its urbanised masses. Now, the club has its own (somewhat spartan) changing facilities and members are  permitted by the Royal Parks to swim in the lake any morning before 09:30.  They race every Saturday morning throughout the year, regardless of the weather.
    SCC_0074_1.jpg
  • Portrait of members of the Serpentine Swimming Club after swimming, Hyde Park, London, UK. The Serpentine Lake is situated in Hyde Park, London’s largest central open space. The Serpentine Swimming Club was formed in 1864 ‘to promote the healthful habit of bathing in open water throughout the year’.  Its headquarters were beneath an old elm tree on the south side of the lake, a wooden bench for clothing being the only facility.  At this time London was undergoing rapid expansion and Hyde Park was now in the centre of a densely populated built up area and provided a place of relaxation to its urbanised masses. Now, the club has its own (somewhat spartan) changing facilities and members are  permitted by the Royal Parks to swim in the lake any morning before 09:30.  They race every Saturday morning throughout the year, regardless of the weather.
    A_8747_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of the Serpentine Swimming Club wrapped in a green towel, Hyde Park, London, UK. The Serpentine Lake is situated in Hyde Park, London’s largest central open space. The Serpentine Swimming Club was formed in 1864 ‘to promote the healthful habit of bathing in open water throughout the year’.  Its headquarters were beneath an old elm tree on the south side of the lake, a wooden bench for clothing being the only facility.  At this time London was undergoing rapid expansion and Hyde Park was now in the centre of a densely populated built up area and provided a place of relaxation to its urbanised masses. Now, the club has its own (somewhat spartan) changing facilities and members are  permitted by the Royal Parks to swim in the lake any morning before 09:30.  They race every Saturday morning throughout the year, regardless of the weather.
    SSC_0025_1.jpg
  • Jeremy Hunter, a member of the Serpentine Swimming Club, stretches before swimming in the Serpentine Lake, Hyde Park, London, UK. The Serpentine Lake is situated in Hyde Park, London’s largest central open space. The Serpentine Swimming Club was formed in 1864 ‘to promote the healthful habit of bathing in open water throughout the year’.  Its headquarters were beneath an old elm tree on the south side of the lake, a wooden bench for clothing being the only facility.  At this time London was undergoing rapid expansion and Hyde Park was now in the centre of a densely populated built up area and provided a place of relaxation to its urbanised masses. Now, the club has its own (somewhat spartan) changing facilities and members are  permitted by the Royal Parks to swim in the lake any morning before 09:30.  They race every Saturday morning throughout the year, regardless of the weather.
    SSC_0039_1.jpg
  • Portrait of Bill Deeley, a member of the Serpentine Swimming Club, Hyde Park, London, UK. The Serpentine Lake is situated in Hyde Park, London’s largest central open space. The Serpentine Swimming Club was formed in 1864 ‘to promote the healthful habit of bathing in open water throughout the year’.  Its headquarters were beneath an old elm tree on the south side of the lake, a wooden bench for clothing being the only facility.  At this time London was undergoing rapid expansion and Hyde Park was now in the centre of a densely populated built up area and provided a place of relaxation to its urbanised masses. Now, the club has its own (somewhat spartan) changing facilities and members are  permitted by the Royal Parks to swim in the lake any morning before 09:30.  They race every Saturday morning throughout the year, regardless of the weather.
    SSC_0054_1.jpg
  • Mary Olivari, a member of the Serpentine Swimming Club, Hyde Park, London, UK. The Serpentine Lake is situated in Hyde Park, London’s largest central open space. The Serpentine Swimming Club was formed in 1864 ‘to promote the healthful habit of bathing in open water throughout the year’.  Its headquarters were beneath an old elm tree on the south side of the lake, a wooden bench for clothing being the only facility.  At this time London was undergoing rapid expansion and Hyde Park was now in the centre of a densely populated built up area and provided a place of relaxation to its urbanised masses. Now, the club has its own (somewhat spartan) changing facilities and members are  permitted by the Royal Parks to swim in the lake any morning before 09:30.  They race every Saturday morning throughout the year, regardless of the weather.
    SCC_0079_1.jpg
  • A member of the Serpentine Swimming Club drying off with a purple towel after swimming in the Serpentine Lake, Hyde Park, London, UK. The Serpentine Lake is situated in Hyde Park, London’s largest central open space. The Serpentine Swimming Club was formed in 1864 ‘to promote the healthful habit of bathing in open water throughout the year’.  Its headquarters were beneath an old elm tree on the south side of the lake, a wooden bench for clothing being the only facility.  At this time London was undergoing rapid expansion and Hyde Park was now in the centre of a densely populated built up area and provided a place of relaxation to its urbanised masses. Now, the club has its own (somewhat spartan) changing facilities and members are  permitted by the Royal Parks to swim in the lake any morning before 09:30.  They race every Saturday morning throughout the year, regardless of the weather.
    SSC_0029_1.jpg
  • A member of the Serpentine Swimming Club after swimming in the Serpentine Lake on a cold Winter day, Hyde Park, London, UK. The Serpentine Lake is situated in Hyde Park, London’s largest central open space. The Serpentine Swimming Club was formed in 1864 ‘to promote the healthful habit of bathing in open water throughout the year’.  Its headquarters were beneath an old elm tree on the south side of the lake, a wooden bench for clothing being the only facility.  At this time London was undergoing rapid expansion and Hyde Park was now in the centre of a densely populated built up area and provided a place of relaxation to its urbanised masses. Now, the club has its own (somewhat spartan) changing facilities and members are  permitted by the Royal Parks to swim in the lake any morning before 09:30.  They race every Saturday morning throughout the year, regardless of the weather.
    SSC_0009_1.jpg
  • A member of the Serpentine Swimming Club walks along 'the Board' on a cold Winter's day, Hyde Park, London, UK. The Serpentine Lake is situated in Hyde Park, London’s largest central open space. The Serpentine Swimming Club was formed in 1864 ‘to promote the healthful habit of bathing in open water throughout the year’.  Its headquarters were beneath an old elm tree on the south side of the lake, a wooden bench for clothing being the only facility.  At this time London was undergoing rapid expansion and Hyde Park was now in the centre of a densely populated built up area and provided a place of relaxation to its urbanised masses. Now, the club has its own (somewhat spartan) changing facilities and members are  permitted by the Royal Parks to swim in the lake any morning before 09:30.  They race every Saturday morning throughout the year, regardless of the weather.
    SSC_0001_1.jpg
  • A member of the Serpentine Swimming Club exercises before swimming, Hyde Park, London, UK. The Serpentine Lake is situated in Hyde Park, London’s largest central open space. The Serpentine Swimming Club was formed in 1864 ‘to promote the healthful habit of bathing in open water throughout the year’.  Its headquarters were beneath an old elm tree on the south side of the lake, a wooden bench for clothing being the only facility.  At this time London was undergoing rapid expansion and Hyde Park was now in the centre of a densely populated built up area and provided a place of relaxation to its urbanised masses. Now, the club has its own (somewhat spartan) changing facilities and members are  permitted by the Royal Parks to swim in the lake any morning before 09:30.  They race every Saturday morning throughout the year, regardless of the weather
    SCC_0113_1.jpg
  • A member of the Serpentine Swimming Club dries off with a pink towel after a Saturday morning swimming race, Hyde Park, London, UK. The Serpentine Lake is situated in Hyde Park, London’s largest central open space. The Serpentine Swimming Club was formed in 1864 ‘to promote the healthful habit of bathing in open water throughout the year’.  Its headquarters were beneath an old elm tree on the south side of the lake, a wooden bench for clothing being the only facility.  At this time London was undergoing rapid expansion and Hyde Park was now in the centre of a densely populated built up area and provided a place of relaxation to its urbanised masses. Now, the club has its own (somewhat spartan) changing facilities and members are  permitted by the Royal Parks to swim in the lake any morning before 09:30.  They race every Saturday morning throughout the year, regardless of the weather
    SCC_0099_1.jpg
  • Portrait of James, a member of the Serpentine Swimming Club, Hyde Park, London, UK. The Serpentine Lake is situated in Hyde Park, London’s largest central open space. The Serpentine Swimming Club was formed in 1864 ‘to promote the healthful habit of bathing in open water throughout the year’.  Its headquarters were beneath an old elm tree on the south side of the lake, a wooden bench for clothing being the only facility.  At this time London was undergoing rapid expansion and Hyde Park was now in the centre of a densely populated built up area and provided a place of relaxation to its urbanised masses. Now, the club has its own (somewhat spartan) changing facilities and members are  permitted by the Royal Parks to swim in the lake any morning before 09:30.  They race every Saturday morning throughout the year, regardless of the weather.
    SCC_0105_1.jpg
  • Robin Hunter, a member of the Serpentine Swimming Club swimming, Hyde Park, London, UK. The Serpentine Lake is situated in Hyde Park, London’s largest central open space. The Serpentine Swimming Club was formed in 1864 ‘to promote the healthful habit of bathing in open water throughout the year’.  Its headquarters were beneath an old elm tree on the south side of the lake, a wooden bench for clothing being the only facility.  At this time London was undergoing rapid expansion and Hyde Park was now in the centre of a densely populated built up area and provided a place of relaxation to its urbanised masses. Now, the club has its own (somewhat spartan) changing facilities and members are  permitted by the Royal Parks to swim in the lake any morning before 09:30.  They race every Saturday morning throughout the year, regardless of the weather.
    SCC_0093_1.jpg
  • Ron Whittam, a member of the Serpentine Swimming Club, drinks a cup of tea after swimming on a cold Winter's day, Hyde Park, London, UK. The Serpentine Lake is situated in Hyde Park, London’s largest central open space. The Serpentine Swimming Club was formed in 1864 ‘to promote the healthful habit of bathing in open water throughout the year’.  Its headquarters were beneath an old elm tree on the south side of the lake, a wooden bench for clothing being the only facility.  At this time London was undergoing rapid expansion and Hyde Park was now in the centre of a densely populated built up area and provided a place of relaxation to its urbanised masses. Now, the club has its own (somewhat spartan) changing facilities and members are  permitted by the Royal Parks to swim in the lake any morning before 09:30.  They race every Saturday morning throughout the year, regardless of the weather.
    SCC_0087_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a member of the Serpentine Swimming Club, Hyde Park, London, UK. The Serpentine Lake is situated in Hyde Park, London’s largest central open space. The Serpentine Swimming Club was formed in 1864 ‘to promote the healthful habit of bathing in open water throughout the year’.  Its headquarters were beneath an old elm tree on the south side of the lake, a wooden bench for clothing being the only facility.  At this time London was undergoing rapid expansion and Hyde Park was now in the centre of a densely populated built up area and provided a place of relaxation to its urbanised masses. Now, the club has its own (somewhat spartan) changing facilities and members are  permitted by the Royal Parks to swim in the lake any morning before 09:30.  They race every Saturday morning throughout the year, regardless of the weather.
    SCC_0085_1.jpg
  • Portrait of Mary Olivari, a member of the Serpentine Swimming Club, Hyde Park, London, UK. The Serpentine Lake is situated in Hyde Park, London’s largest central open space. The Serpentine Swimming Club was formed in 1864 ‘to promote the healthful habit of bathing in open water throughout the year’.  Its headquarters were beneath an old elm tree on the south side of the lake, a wooden bench for clothing being the only facility.  At this time London was undergoing rapid expansion and Hyde Park was now in the centre of a densely populated built up area and provided a place of relaxation to its urbanised masses. Now, the club has its own (somewhat spartan) changing facilities and members are  permitted by the Royal Parks to swim in the lake any morning before 09:30.  They race every Saturday morning throughout the year, regardless of the weather.
    SCC_0081_1.jpg
  • Portrait of members of the Serpentine Swimming Club after swimming, Hyde Park, London, UK. The Serpentine Lake is situated in Hyde Park, London’s largest central open space. The Serpentine Swimming Club was formed in 1864 ‘to promote the healthful habit of bathing in open water throughout the year’.  Its headquarters were beneath an old elm tree on the south side of the lake, a wooden bench for clothing being the only facility.  At this time London was undergoing rapid expansion and Hyde Park was now in the centre of a densely populated built up area and provided a place of relaxation to its urbanised masses. Now, the club has its own (somewhat spartan) changing facilities and members are  permitted by the Royal Parks to swim in the lake any morning before 09:30.  They race every Saturday morning throughout the year, regardless of the weather.
    A_8719_1.jpg
  • Members of the Serpentine Swimming Club walks climb out of the Serpentine Lake after a Saturday race on a cold Winter's day, Hyde Park, London, UK. The Serpentine Lake is situated in Hyde Park, London’s largest central open space. The Serpentine Swimming Club was formed in 1864 ‘to promote the healthful habit of bathing in open water throughout the year’.  Its headquarters were beneath an old elm tree on the south side of the lake, a wooden bench for clothing being the only facility.  At this time London was undergoing rapid expansion and Hyde Park was now in the centre of a densely populated built up area and provided a place of relaxation to its urbanised masses. Now, the club has its own (somewhat spartan) changing facilities and members are  permitted by the Royal Parks to swim in the lake any morning before 09:30.  They race every Saturday morning throughout the year, regardless of the weather.
    A_7226_1.jpg
  • A member of the Serpentine Swimming Club swimming in the Serpentine Lake, Hyde Park, London, UK. The Serpentine Lake is situated in Hyde Park, London’s largest central open space. The Serpentine Swimming Club was formed in 1864 ‘to promote the healthful habit of bathing in open water throughout the year’.  Its headquarters were beneath an old elm tree on the south side of the lake, a wooden bench for clothing being the only facility.  At this time London was undergoing rapid expansion and Hyde Park was now in the centre of a densely populated built up area and provided a place of relaxation to its urbanised masses. Now, the club has its own (somewhat spartan) changing facilities and members are  permitted by the Royal Parks to swim in the lake any morning before 09:30.  They race every Saturday morning throughout the year, regardless of the weather.
    A_8735_1.jpg
  • Pilot of the Red Arrows, Britain's RAF aerobatic team relaxes in hotel after their Bastille Day flypast over Paris. After arriving back on the ground and their Paris hotel, the British officer and his team has ended France's Bastille Day parade. They were chosen by the French authorities to close the fly-pasts. British armed forces paraded in the historic parade for the first time. Under blue skies on a perfect summer day, the squadron lined up in their classic fly-past 'V-shape' called 'Big Battle', following the straight line of the Champs Elysees then eastwards over the Parisian suburbs. Personnel from four British military units were present and French Air Force jets performed their own fly-past to open the parade, while the British Hawk jets of the Red Arrows had the honour of completing it.
    Red_Arrows465_RBA.jpg
  • A Lao woman washing and relaxing in Nameuang hot springs after working in the fields, Houaphan province, Lao PDR.
    A0021884cc_1.jpg
  • A woman enjoys the sunshine whilst relaxing after cross country ski-ing on the frozen lake Paijanne, Jyvaskyla, Central Finland. Jyvaskyla is the capital of Central Finland and the largest city in the Finnish Lakeland, an area of more than 188,000 lakes. During the Winter, the city is transformed and the lakes which surround it become a temporary urban park with a specially constructed ice skating and other paths carved out by ski-ers, dog walkers and pedestrians.
    11-07_1.jpg
  • A portrait of English singer and musician, Roger Daltrey relaxing at the waters edge at the trout farm he developed, in the summer of 1989, near Burwash, England. Roger Harry Daltrey, CBE b1944 is an English singer-songwriter and actor. In a career spanning more than 50 years, Daltrey came to prominence in the mid-1960s as the founder and lead singer of the English rock band The Who, which released fourteen singles that entered the Top 10 charts in the United Kingdom during the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s.
    roger_daltrey-01-06-1989.jpg
  • A chef lights a cigarette and relaxes at a table picturing the ancient ruins of Gerrha, in front of a panorama of the Bekaa Valley in Lebanon outside a Lebanese cafe in London's Soho. The panoramic landscape of this Lebanese landmark plus the juxtaposition of the ruins make an incongruous detail in this modern central London street known for its restaurants, cafes and media businesses.
    lebanese_cafe03-23-03-2015_1.jpg
  • Laos is the most bombed country, per capita, in the world with more than 270 million cluster bomb submunitions dropped on it during the Vietnam War from 1963 to 1974. The Mines Advisory Group (MAG) are a humanitarian organisation clearing the remnants of conflict worldwide and have been working in Lao PDR since 1994. UXO clearance team 6 (UCT6) is an all-female team, one of MAG’s seven UXO clearance teams in Xieng Khouang Province, one of the most heavily bombed provinces in Lao PDR. MAG provides a permanent camp for each team so that members can stay together during their three weeks on site. UCT6 spend time together after work relaxing chatting together back at the camp in Ban Namoune village.
    A0012122cc_1_1.jpg
  • A Lao woman washing and relaxing in Nameuang hot springs after working in the fields, Houaphan province, Lao PDR.
    A0021883cc_1.jpg
  • A man wearing a woollen hat relaxes in a hole in the ice after taking a sauna in the small lake Vuorilampi, Jyvaskyla, Central Finland.
    A 3695_1.jpg
  • Young woman reclining relaxing in fresh water, El Nicho, in the forest between Ciengfuegos and Trinidade, Cienfuegos province, Cuba. .
    _MG_2763.jpg
  • A couple talk and enjoy the sights and sounds from the Lake of stars music festival in Chinteche town on the shores of lake Malawi.
    20071007_malawi_ubuntu_0101-3_1.jpg
  • Temporary admin staff member with the Red Arrows, Britain's RAF aerobatic team plays guitar after a day's work. See from above, the man strums his Fender unplugged in afternoon sunshine after a day's work during Spring training at RAF Akrotiri, a British-run base in southern Cyprus.
    Red_Arrows118_RBA.jpg
  • South Londoners enjoy deckchairs outside Herne Hill station during a summer heatwave. A queue of people waiting to obtain cash from an ATM while on two of the chairs a man reading a Saturday tabloid newspaper and another, looking depressed and downtrodden on a day of otherwise festivity when the local Lambeth Show occurs in nearby Brockwell Park in this district of south London.
    herne_hill_deckchairs02-20-07-2013_1...jpg
  • As a jogger stretches, lunchtime spring crowds enjoy warm weather beneath the pillars at Cornhill Exchange in the City of London, the heart of the capital's financial centre, dating back to first century Roman Britain. We see the classic neo-Romanesque architecture of the Royal Exchange building. At the top of Doric and Ionic columns with their ornate stonework, designed by Sir William Tite in 1842-1844 and opened in 1844 by Queen Victoria). It’s the third building of the kind erected on the same site. The first Exchange erected in 1564-70 by sir Thomas Gresham but was destroyed in the great fire of 1666. It’s successor, by Jarman, was also burned down in 1838. The present building is grade 1 listed and cost about £150,000.
    city_cornhill11-23-04-2013_1.jpg
  • Lunchtime sun for City of London office workers in the grounds of St. Botolph’s without Bishopsgate church. <br />
Christian worship has probably been offered at this location at the church of St. Botolph’s without Bishopsgate since Roman times. The original Saxon church, the foundations of which were discovered when the present church was erected, is first mentioned as ‘Sancti Botolfi Extra Bishopesgate’ in 1212. St. Botolph without Bishopsgate may have survived the Great Fire of London unscathed, and only lost one window in the Second World War, but on 24 April 1993 was one of the many buildings to be damaged by an IRA bomb.
    st_botolphs01-13-08-2014.jpg
  • Rest seat made from logs in the Pralongià above San Cassiano-St. Kassian in the Dolomites, south Tyrol, northern Italy. In winter, the Pralongià meadows are the heart of Alta Badia’s skiing area. With the backdrop of mountain peak panoramas and forests, this is known as the Movimënt where activities for families with young people can play, exercise and general experience the great outdoors at 2,000 metres above sea level between the towns of La Villa, San Cassiano and Corvara in the Alta Badia area of south Tyrol.
    piz_sorega13-17-07-2015_1.jpg
  • Sunbathing hikers in deckchairs in the Pralongià above San Cassiano-St. Kassian in the Dolomites, south Tyrol, northern Italy. In winter, the Pralongià meadows are the heart of Alta Badia’s skiing area. Hiking trails lead across the high alpine pastureland between Corvara and San Cassiano (St. Kassian) with hilly upland meadows with vast mountain pastures and many old hay huts, a pretty group of trees at the edges of the meadows, and the beautiful shapes of the surrounding mountains, which include the Gruppo di Sella (Sellastock) Massif, Sassongher, Monte Cavallo (Heiligkreuzkofel), Cunturines and Lagazuoi.
    piz_sorega05-17-07-2015_1.jpg
  • Naturalist and broadcaster Sir David Attenborough watches video of killer whale sequence from The Trials of Life at home in London. Sir David Frederick Attenborough (born 1926) is a British broadcaster and naturalist. His career as the face and voice of natural history programmes has endured for more than 50 years. He is best known for writing and presenting the nine Life series, in conjunction with the BBC Natural History Unit, which collectively form a comprehensive survey of all life on the planet. He is also a former senior manager at the BBC, having served as controller of BBC Two and director of programming for BBC Television in the 1960s and 1970s. Attenborough is widely considered a national treasure in Britain, although he himself does not care for the term. He is a younger brother of director, producer and actor Richard Attenborough.
    david_attenborough03-17-09-1990_1.jpg
  • Naturalist and broadcaster Sir David Attenborough watches video of killer whale sequence from The Trials of Life at home in London. Sir David Frederick Attenborough (born 1926) is a British broadcaster and naturalist. His career as the face and voice of natural history programmes has endured for more than 50 years. He is best known for writing and presenting the nine Life series, in conjunction with the BBC Natural History Unit, which collectively form a comprehensive survey of all life on the planet. He is also a former senior manager at the BBC, having served as controller of BBC Two and director of programming for BBC Television in the 1960s and 1970s. Attenborough is widely considered a national treasure in Britain, although he himself does not care for the term. He is a younger brother of director, producer and actor Richard Attenborough.
    david_attenborough01-17-09-1990_1.jpg
  • Naturalist and broadcaster Sir David Attenborough watches video of killer whale sequence from The Trials of Life at home in London. Sir David Frederick Attenborough (born 1926) is a British broadcaster and naturalist. His career as the face and voice of natural history programmes has endured for more than 50 years. He is best known for writing and presenting the nine Life series, in conjunction with the BBC Natural History Unit, which collectively form a comprehensive survey of all life on the planet. He is also a former senior manager at the BBC, having served as controller of BBC Two and director of programming for BBC Television in the 1960s and 1970s. Attenborough is widely considered a national treasure in Britain, although he himself does not care for the term. He is a younger brother of director, producer and actor Richard Attenborough.
    david_attenborough04-17-09-1990_1.jpg
  • Naturalist and broadcaster Sir David Attenborough watches video of killer whale sequence from The Trials of Life at home in London. Sir David Frederick Attenborough (born 1926) is a British broadcaster and naturalist. His career as the face and voice of natural history programmes has endured for more than 50 years. He is best known for writing and presenting the nine Life series, in conjunction with the BBC Natural History Unit, which collectively form a comprehensive survey of all life on the planet. He is also a former senior manager at the BBC, having served as controller of BBC Two and director of programming for BBC Television in the 1960s and 1970s. Attenborough is widely considered a national treasure in Britain, although he himself does not care for the term. He is a younger brother of director, producer and actor Richard Attenborough.
    david_attenborough02-17-09-1990_1.jpg
  • Smoking women and dejected-looking businessmen sit looking at the ground in sunshine outside an office complex in the City of London. During a lull in afternoon work, the two men are sitting in a warm place outside the corporate building, talking quietly about an issue or problem. Two women stand in a similar pose in almost matching coats holding cigarettes in their fingers - a few minutes respite from their office jobs. The are is a pedestrian zone on Lime Street in the City, the heart of the capital's financial district founded by the Romans in the 1st Century.
    city_people05-17-04-2015_1.jpg
  • Lunchtime sun for City of London office workers in the grounds of St. Botolph’s without Bishopsgate church, on 9th June 2016, in London, United Kingdom. Christian worship has probably been offered at this location at the church of St. Botolph’s without Bishopsgate since Roman times. The original Saxon church, the foundations of which were discovered when the present church was erected, is first mentioned as ‘Sancti Botolfi Extra Bishopesgate’ in 1212. St. Botolph without Bishopsgate may have survived the Great Fire of London unscathed, and only lost one window in the Second World War, but on 24 April 1993 was one of the many buildings to be damaged by an IRA bomb.
    city_people-21-09-06-2016.jpg
  • In his private rooms, Father Phillipe Dubos a country priest blows smoke from his pipe in the Presbytry at Equetot a local Catholic church in rural Normandy. With literature lining a bookcase and paperwork on his office table, the priest exhales from his pipe, blowing blue smoke across the study. It is a quiet moment after a busy morning of Mass and community activities. It is estimated that somewhere between 83% to 88% of France's population are Catholic. The church is organised into 98 dioceses, served by 20,523 priests.
    catholic_priest4-12-10-1997_1.jpg
  • A lady sits outside in morning sunshine on the terrace of her B+B guesthouse in the Devon seaside town of Paignton. It is late morning and a lady has emerged from her bead and breakfast. Sunlight is quite high in the sky and the shadows of a vine that is growing across the roof of the building's terrace, is seen on the wall behind the woman. She is seated reading a magazine in a garden chair and is surrounded by colourful flowers in their prime. Well-painted original victorian railings that act as a sort of ballustrade are in front of the female. In the window is a scene of typical seaside Englishness. Serviettes are splayed out on a table along with breakfast or dinner items awaiting guests at the next meal.
    b+b_woman-21-07-1992_1.jpg
  • Pilots of the Red Arrows, Britain's RAF aerobatic team gather in hotel after their Bastille Day flypast over Paris. After arriving back on the ground and their Paris hotel, the British officers meet wives and girlfriends after ending France's Bastille Day parade. They were chosen by the French authorities to close the fly-pasts. British armed forces paraded in the historic parade for the first time. Under blue skies on a perfect summer day, the squadron lined up in their classic fly-past 'V-shape' called 'Big Battle', following the straight line of the Champs Elysees then eastwards over the Parisian suburbs. Personnel from four British military units were present and French Air Force jets performed their own fly-past to open the parade, while the British Hawk jets of the Red Arrows had the honour of completing it.
    Red_Arrows463_RBA.jpg
  • Young Germans enjoy spring sunshine on deckchairs and beach-style seating, in Alexanderplatz, Berlin Mitte. It is a warm spring Sunday after noon and many have come here to shop and sample typical German wursts and burgers, beer and sweets. Alexanderplatz is a large public square and transport hub in the central Mitte district of Berlin, near the Fernsehturm. Berliners often call it simply Alex, referring to a larger neighbourhood stretching from Mollstraße in the northeast to Spandauer Straße and the City Hall in the southwest.
    berlin_alexanderplatz01-07-04-2013_1.jpg
  • A traditional hammock hangs between two palm trees on Paje beach. Zanzibar is a small island just off the coast of the Tanzanian mainland in the Indian Ocean. In part due to it's name, Zanzibar is a travel destination of mystical reputation, known for it's incredible sealife on it's many reefs, the powder white coral sand beaches and the traditional cultivation of spices.
    2008_12_03_Paje beach_G.jpg
  • A traditional hammock hangs between two palm trees on Paje beach. Zanzibar is a small island just off the coast of the Tanzanian mainland in the Indian Ocean. In part due to it's name, Zanzibar is a travel destination of mystical reputation, known for it's incredible sealife on it's many reefs, the powder white coral sand beaches and the traditional cultivation of spices.
    2008_12_03_Paje beach_F.jpg
  • St Katherines Dock, a marina near to Tower Bridge. This marina allows boats and yachts in twice per day as the tide is high and the lock can allow ships in.
    _MG_3615.jpg
  • St Katherines Dock, a marina near to Tower Bridge. This marina allows boats and yachts in twice per day as the tide is high and the lock can allow ships in.
    _MG_3614.jpg
  • Scenes of both tourists and local office workers sunbathing on the grass at the park near to Tower Bridge. Here the Cityof London including the Gherkin are over the river.
    _MG_3607.jpg
  • Scenes of both tourists and local office workers sunbathing on the grass at the London Bridge City Park near to Tower Bridge. This area is an icon for tourism, bringing thousands in each day.
    _MG_3606.jpg
  • Chinese tourists posing to have their photo taken at Tower Bridge in London, England, United Kingdom. Scenes of both tourists and local office workers enjoying hanging out on the grass at the London Bridge City Park near to Tower Bridge. This area is an icon for tourism, bringing thousands of people in each day.
    20190820_tower bridge_004.jpg
  • Tourists at Tower Bridge in London, England, United Kingdom. Scenes of both tourists and local office workers enjoying hanging out on the piazza at the London Bridge City Park near to Tower Bridge. This area is an icon for tourism, bringing thousands of people in each day.
    20190820_tower bridge_003.jpg
  • Tourists at Tower Bridge in London, England, United Kingdom. Scenes of both tourists and local office workers enjoying hanging out on the grass at the London Bridge City Park near to Tower Bridge. This area is an icon for tourism, bringing thousands of people in each day.
    20190820_tower bridge_001.jpg
  • Tourist does a hand stand at Tower Bridge in London, England, United Kingdom. Scenes of both tourists and local office workers enjoying hanging out on the grass at the London Bridge City Park near to Tower Bridge. This area is an icon for tourism, bringing thousands of people in each day.
    20190815_tower bridge_001.jpg
  • Laos is the most bombed country, per capita, in the world with more than 270 million cluster bomb submunitions dropped on it during the Vietnam War from 1963 to 1974. The Mines Advisory Group (MAG) are a humanitarian organisation clearing the remnants of conflict worldwide and have been working in Lao PDR since 1994. UXO clearance team 6 (UCT6) is an all-female team, one of MAG’s seven UXO clearance teams in Xieng Khouang Province, one of the most heavily bombed provinces in Lao PDR. MAG provides a permanent camp for each team so that members can stay together during their three weeks on site. UCT6 spend time together after work washing themselves, their clothes and chatting together back at the camp in Ban Namoune village.
    A0012145ccrt_1_1.jpg
  • A resting passenger sleeps on a specially-designed circular couch near airport gates during his layover transit period at Heathrow airport's Terminal 5. The man has jet lag after a long-haul flight across continents and now needs to re-adjust to British Summer time (BST). Vast sheets of window glass lets in natural daylight in this tranquil area where travellers can remain largely undisturbed from the otherwise hectic airport terminal created by the Richard Rogers Partnership (now Rogers Stirk Harbour and Partners). From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009).
    heathrow_airport40-10-07-2009_1.jpg
  • Three dads are looking their respective children of varying ages - from a baby to an infant and 8-year old. In the foreground a father reads his tabloid newspaper as his toddler sleeps contentedly in its pushchair, a dummy in the mouth and a blanket scross its body to keep out a chilly breeze. Further back another man stands waiting for his partner with a baby, also asleep in the buggy. And thirdly, a male pushes his daughter in pink up a small slope on a bicycle that uses stablizers. It is a busy scene on Paignton seafront on the Devon coast. Elsewhere children and adults of all ages walk along the esplanade enjoying an overcast and windy day on holiday. This theatrical scene is about the ideal father and the family unit.
    england_beach06-15-12-2007_1.jpg
  • A lady holds a private conversation while seated in a deckchair on Leadenhall in the City of London, aka The Square Mile the capitals financial district, on 2nd September 2019, in London, England.
    city_people-08-02-09-2019.jpg
  • Caye Caulker snorkelling, clear blue azure water, fish, Belize.
    snorkelling09_1.jpg
  • Caye Caulker snorkelling, clear blue azure water, fish, Belize.
    snorkelling05_1.jpg
  • Caye Caulker snorkelling, clear blue azure water, fish, Belize.
    snorkelling06_1.jpg
  • Caye Caulker snorkelling, clear blue azure water, fish, Belize.
    snorkelling08_1.jpg
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