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  • The giant presence of Team GB role-model athlete heroes on the side of the their HQ at the Westfield City shopping complex, Stratford that leads to the Olympic Park during the London 2012 Olympics, the 30th Olympiad. The ads are for Visa and for sports footwear brand Adidas and their 'Take the Stage' campaign including diver Tom Daley, gymnast Louis Smith and the darling of British athletics, heptathlete gold medallist Jessica Ennis. Situated on the fringe of the 2012 Olympic park, Westfield is Europe's largest urban shopping centre providing the main access to the Olympic park with a central 'street' giving 75% of Olympic visitors access to the main stadium so retail space.
    olympic_stratford52-06-08-2012.jpg
  • The giant presence of Team GB role-model athlete heroes on the side of the their HQ at the Westfield City shopping complex, Stratford that leads to the Olympic Park during the London 2012 Olympics, the 30th Olympiad. The ads are for Visa and for sports footwear brand Adidas and their 'Take the Stage' campaign including diver Tom Daley, gymnast Louis Smith and the darling of British athletics, heptathlete gold medallist Jessica Ennis. Situated on the fringe of the 2012 Olympic park, Westfield is Europe's largest urban shopping centre providing the main access to the Olympic park with a central 'street' giving 75% of Olympic visitors access to the main stadium so retail space.
    olympic_stratford49-06-08-2012.jpg
  • The giant presence of Team GB role-model athlete heroes on the side of the their HQ at the Westfield City shopping complex, Stratford that leads to the Olympic Park during the London 2012 Olympics, the 30th Olympiad. The ad is for sports footwear brand Adidas and their 'Take The Stage' campaign. The faces include diver Tom Daley, gymnast Louis Smith and the darling of British athletics, heptathlete gold medallist Jessica Ennis
    olympic_stratford23-06-08-2012.jpg
  • The giant presence of Team GB role-model athlete heroes on the side of the their HQ at the Westfield City shopping complex, Stratford that leads to the Olympic Park during the London 2012 Olympics, the 30th Olympiad. The ad is for sports footwear brand Adidas and their 'Take The Stage' campaign. The faces include diver Tom Daley, gymnast Louis Smith and the darling of British athletics, heptathlete gold medallist Jessica Ennis
    olympic_stratford04-06-08-2012.jpg
  • The giant presence of Team GB role-model athlete heroes on the side of the their HQ at the Westfield City shopping complex, Stratford that leads to the Olympic Park during the London 2012 Olympics, the 30th Olympiad. The ad is for sports footwear brand Adidas and their 'Take The Stage' campaign. The faces include diver Tom Daley, gymnast Louis Smith and the darling of British athletics, heptathlete gold medallist Jessica Ennis
    olympic_stratford54-06-08-2012.jpg
  • Thomas Simpson explores the lines of a Prototype miniature formula 1 car during a team Pulse development session at Devonport high school, Plymouth. <br />
<br />
Racing Model cars made of balsa wood, finding big money sponsorship and solving Tricky physics problems are all in a day’s work for the children taking part in the global F1 in schools project. A technology challenge in which children use computers to design, test and build miniature formula 1 cars.
    F1inschools8_1.jpg
  • Team Momentus from The Gryphon School in Dorset: (from left) Tom Long, 19, Matthew Bugler,18, and Nathan Riley,17, explore the aerodynamics of their F1 car with their home-made computer-controlled wind tunnel. <br />
<br />
Racing model cars made of balsa wood, finding big money sponsorship and solving Tricky physics problems are all in a day’s work for the children taking part in the global F1 in schools project. A technology challenge in which children use computers to design, test and build miniature Formula 1 cars
    F1inschools_1.jpg
  • Team Momentus from The Gryphon School in Dorset: (from left) Tom Long, 19, Matthew Bugler,18, and Nathan Riley,17, explore the aerodynamics of their F1 car with their home-made computer-controlled wind tunnel. <br />
<br />
Racing model cars made of balsa wood, finding big money sponsorship and solving Tricky physics problems are all in a day’s work for the children taking part in the global F1 in schools project. A technology challenge in which children use computers to design, test and build miniature Formula 1 cars
    f1in schools24_1.jpg
  • Thomas Simpson explores the lines of a Prototype miniature formula 1 car during a team Pulse development session at Devonport high school, Plymouth. <br />
<br />
Racing Model cars made of balsa wood, finding big money sponsorship and solving Tricky physics problems are all in a day’s work for the children taking part in the global F1 in schools project. A technology challenge in which children use computers to design, test and build miniature formula 1 cars.
    F1_1.jpg
  • Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt's Visa ad on a red London bus and a inspiring image of Team GB gold medallist heptathlete Jessica Ennis on the exterior of the Adidas store in central London's Oxford Street, during the London 2012 Olympic Games. The Ennis ad is for sports footwear brand Adidas and their 'Take The Stage' campaign which is viewable across Britain and to Britons who have been cheering these athletes who have been winning medals in numbers not seen for 100 years. Their heroic performances have surprised a host nation who until the victories, were largely anti-Olympics - now adoring their darling Ennis and her good looks.
    olympic_city19-08-08-2012.jpg
  • Team Pulse: (Andrew Lees, 16; Thomas Simpson, 17, John Ware, 16, and Samuel Wood, 16.) and 1200 other students of Devonport High school are taught in the shadow of The Royal Albert Bridge, (shown in background), Brunel’s 1859 Engineering masterpiece. These students, not to be outdone competed in Malaysia against thirty other teams and twenty-five countries to become world champions of ‘F1 in Schools’ winning scholarships to a top  London university, a chance to meet Bernie Ecclestone, Lewis Hamilton and to compete with the F1’s boffins behind world champs Ferrari:  a race, which, of course they won. The competition primarily
    F1inschools5_1.jpg
  • Team Pulse: (Andrew Lees, 16; Thomas Simpson, 17, John Ware, 16, and Samuel Wood, 16.) and 1200 other students of Devonport High school are taught in the shadow of The Royal Albert Bridge, (shown in background), Brunel’s 1859 Engineering masterpiece. These students, not to be outdone competed in Malaysia against thirty other teams and twenty-five countries to become world champions of ‘F1 in Schools’ winning scholarships to a top  London university, a chance to meet Bernie Ecclestone, Lewis Hamilton and to compete with the F1’s boffins behind world champs Ferrari:  a race, which, of course they won. The competition primarily
    F1inschools4_1.jpg
  • Collection of test and prototype racing cars belonging to ‘F1 In Schools’  National champions ‘Team Momentus’ from Gryphon school in Dorset.  The cars are pocket rockets, gas powered, aerodynamically designed, machined balsa wood raced along straight track at speeds up to  0.532m. per second.<br />
<br />
 Momentus have had to come up with some clever strategies to earn their place as F1 In Schools UK national champions including securing help from the nearby HQ of Westland Augusta helicopters for aerodynamics  mentoring and  earning several thousand pounds in fundraising schemes.
    F1inschools3_1.jpg
  • Nathan Riley, 17,  holding  the Team Momentus test car.<br />
The cars are pocket rockets: gas powered, aerodynamically designed, machined  balsa wood raced along straight track at speeds up to 0.532m. per second.<br />
Momentus have had to come up with some clever strategies to earn their place as F1 In Schools  Uk national champions, including securing help from the nearby HQ of Westland Augusta Helicopters for aerodynamics, mentoring and earning several thousand pounds in fundraising schemes.
    F1inschools2_1.jpg
  • Andrew Lees, 16; Thomas Simpson, 17 working on the development of Team Pulse’s miniature Formula One car in preparation of the F1 In School’s World Championship. At this point they have no idea they are going to go to become world champions, meet Bernie Ecclestone, Lewis Hamilton and compete with the F1’s boffins behind world champs Ferrari:  a race, which, of course they won.
    F1inschools11_1.jpg
  • Team Pulse, of Devonport High School for Boys take a break from testing their car: (from left) Andrew Lees, 16; Thomas Simpson, 17, John Ware, 16 and Samuel Wood, 16.  This year Team Pulse competed in Malaysia against thirty other teams and twenty-five countries to become World champions of ‘F1 in Schools’ winning scholarships to a top London university, a chance to meet Bernie Ecclestone, Lewis Hamilton and to compete with the F1’s boffins behind world champs, Ferrari:  a race, which of course, they won.
    F1inschools9_1.jpg
  • Andrew Lees, 16; Thomas Simpson, 17 working on the development of Team Pulse’s miniature Formula One car in preparation of the F1 In School’s World Championship. At this point they have no idea they are going to go to become world champions, meet Bernie Ecclestone, Lewis Hamilton and compete with the F1’s boffins behind world champs Ferrari:  a race, which, of course they won.
    F1inschools6_1.jpg
  • Two young women sit and rest from shopping beneath the inspiring image of Team GB gold medallist Ben Ainsley who adorns the exterior of the Adidas store in central London's Oxford Street, during the London 2012 Olympic Games. The ad is for sports footwear brand Adidas and their 'Take The Stage/Water' campaign which is viewable across Britain and to Britons who have been cheering these athletes who have been winning medals in numbers not seen for 100 years. Their heroic performances have surprised a host nation who until the victories, were largely anti-Olympics.
    olympic_city21-08-08-2012.jpg
  • Passers-by walk beneath the inspiring images of Team GB gold medallist heptathlete Jessica Ennis and long jumper Phillips Idowu adorn the exterior of the Adidas store in central London's Oxford Street, during the London 2012 Olympic Games. The ad is for sports footwear brand Adidas and their 'Take The Stage/Crown' campaign which is viewable across Britain and to Britons who have been cheering these athletes who have been winning medals in numbers not seen for 100 years. Their heroic performances have surprised a host nation who until the victories, were largely anti-Olympics - now adoring their darling Ennis and her good looks.
    olympic_city10-08-08-2012.jpg
  • Models stand next to a street billboard for high-street retailer New Look, outisde London Fashion Week in the Strand, on 17th Febriary 2017, in London, England, United Kingdom. London Fashion Week is a clothing trade show held in London twice each year, in February and September. It is one of the Big Four fashion weeks, along with the New York, Milan and Paris. The fashion sector plays a significant role in the UK economy with London Fashion Week alone estimated to rake in £269 million each season. The six-day industry event allows designers to show their collections to buyers, journalists and celebrities and also maintains the city’s status as a top fashion capital.
    london_fashion_show-30-17-02-2017.jpg
  • Staff from a fashion house carry equipment, including the models catwalk running order outisde London Fashion Week in the Strand, on 17th Febriary 2017, in London, England, United Kingdom. London Fashion Week is a clothing trade show held in London twice each year, in February and September. It is one of the Big Four fashion weeks, along with the New York, Milan and Paris. The fashion sector plays a significant role in the UK economy with London Fashion Week alone estimated to rake in £269 million each season. The six-day industry event allows designers to show their collections to buyers, journalists and celebrities and also maintains the city’s status as a top fashion capital.
    london_fashion_show-22-17-02-2017.jpg
  • Lingerie-clad models stage a protest by the animal rights organisation, Peta against the suffering of animals, on 17th Febriary 2017, in London, England, United Kingdom. The group stripped off into matching green underwear and crocodile masks before posing outside the shows main venue on the Strand in central London. Peta is campaigning against the use of exotic animal skins in the fashion industry. It follows an investigation of crocodile farms which found animals were confined to pits and sometimes still alive when their skin was torn off, Peta said. London Fashion Week is a clothing trade show held in London twice each year, in February and September. It is one of the Big Four fashion weeks, along with the New York, Milan and Paris. The fashion sector plays a significant role in the UK economy with London Fashion Week alone estimated to rake in £269 million each season. The six-day industry event allows designers to show their collections to buyers, journalists and celebrities and also maintains the city’s status as a top fashion capital.
    london_fashion_show-06-17-02-2017.jpg
  • Lingerie-clad models stage a protest by the animal rights organisation, Peta against the suffering of animals, on 17th Febriary 2017, in London, England, United Kingdom. The group stripped off into matching green underwear and crocodile masks before posing outside the shows main venue on the Strand in central London. Peta is campaigning against the use of exotic animal skins in the fashion industry. It follows an investigation of crocodile farms which found animals were confined to pits and sometimes still alive when their skin was torn off, Peta said. London Fashion Week is a clothing trade show held in London twice each year, in February and September. It is one of the Big Four fashion weeks, along with the New York, Milan and Paris. The fashion sector plays a significant role in the UK economy with London Fashion Week alone estimated to rake in £269 million each season. The six-day industry event allows designers to show their collections to buyers, journalists and celebrities and also maintains the city’s status as a top fashion capital.
    london_fashion_show-01-17-02-2017.jpg
  • Lingerie-clad models stage a protest by the animal rights organisation, Peta against the suffering of animals, on 17th Febriary 2017, in London, England, United Kingdom. The group stripped off into matching green underwear and crocodile masks before posing outside the shows main venue on the Strand in central London. Peta is campaigning against the use of exotic animal skins in the fashion industry. It follows an investigation of crocodile farms which found animals were confined to pits and sometimes still alive when their skin was torn off, Peta said. London Fashion Week is a clothing trade show held in London twice each year, in February and September. It is one of the Big Four fashion weeks, along with the New York, Milan and Paris. The fashion sector plays a significant role in the UK economy with London Fashion Week alone estimated to rake in £269 million each season. The six-day industry event allows designers to show their collections to buyers, journalists and celebrities and also maintains the city’s status as a top fashion capital.
    london_fashion_show-04-17-02-2017.jpg
  • A stylish woman walks towards the entrance of London Fashion Week in the Strand, on 17th Febriary 2017, in London, England, United Kingdom. London Fashion Week is a clothing trade show held in London twice each year, in February and September. It is one of the Big Four fashion weeks, along with the New York, Milan and Paris. The fashion sector plays a significant role in the UK economy with London Fashion Week alone estimated to rake in £269 million each season. The six-day industry event allows designers to show their collections to buyers, journalists and celebrities and also maintains the city’s status as a top fashion capital.
    london_fashion_show-14-17-02-2017.jpg
  • The ex-England footballer, now BBC TV football presenter Gary Lineker appears large on a construction hoarding in Oxford Street, on 5th March 2019, in London, England.
    gary_linneker-01-05-03-2019.jpg
  • The ex-England footballer, now BBC TV football presenter Gary Lineker appears large on a construction hoarding in Oxford Street, on 5th March 2019, in London, England.
    gary_linneker-04-05-03-2019.jpg
  • A father and son look at a smartphone together during a day out in wales, sit on concrete blocks. The boy's device is being shown to the father so he can better understand its functions and features, something that the older generation can't always comprehend. They sit on concrete building materials, circular pipes a local building project.
    long_boarding06-30-08-2015.jpg
  • Christian Taylor, the American world triple jump champion meets fans after his TV appearance on NBC's Today show broadcast live from the Olympic Park during the London 2012 Olympics. Taylor added Olympic gold to his tally, holding off his compatriot Will Claye in a contest whose earlier stages almost saw Taylor eliminated after two fouls.
    olympic_park46-10-08-2012.jpg
  • On a bright summer afternoon, a young spoiled girl shows-off by riding her favourite motorized Barbie trike along The Parade, the main promenade in the north Welsh seaside town of Llandudno, Wales. Wearing a bright pink helmet and travelling on the matching pink toy bike, she trundles along with the low-tide coast over her left shoulder. Barbie is a best-selling fashion doll launched in 1959 and produced by Mattel, Inc. The brand's merchandising reaches far and wide to countries and cultures around the world and this little girl seems to be the happiest on the beach, enjoying a generous present perhaps from a parent. She is the exact age that Mattel are targeting when they market these toys to accompany their dolls and accessories though the industry has come under fire for its controversial stereotyping of gender and subtle sexuality.
    barbie_girl05-18-1992_1.jpg
  • Portrait of educational motivator and role model at Kids Company, David Gustave. David mentors the troubled youth of Peckham in south London. David is of mixed Irish and St. Lucian heritage, raised in a mostly white working-class neighbourhood in London where he was forced to confront racism in the form of verbal and physical abuse. After a troubled youth himself, he found a way to study history at Wadham College, Oxford. Winning scholarships from the Middle Temple to pursue a career at the Bar (law). He then decided to make a difference and impart his knowledge at a street-level. For the past 4 years Gustave has been working with young gang members. He has been described as a ‘Social Visionary’.
    david_gustave9-11-August-2011_1.jpg
  • Portrait of educational motivator and role model at Kids Company, David Gustave. David mentors the troubled youth of Peckham in south London. David is of mixed Irish and St. Lucian heritage, raised in a mostly white working-class neighbourhood in London where he was forced to confront racism in the form of verbal and physical abuse. After a troubled youth himself, he found a way to study history at Wadham College, Oxford. Winning scholarships from the Middle Temple to pursue a career at the Bar (law). He then decided to make a difference and impart his knowledge at a street-level. For the past 4 years Gustave has been working with young gang members. He has been described as a ‘Social Visionary’.
    david_gustave13-11-August-2011-1_1.jpg
  • A special effects model maker artist works on a clay head of actor Pierce Brosnan in his role as James Bond in the 1996 film GoldenEye, filmed at an old Rolls-Royce factory at the Leavesden Aerodrome in Hertfordshire. Using publicity and studio head shots of Brosnan, the woman refers to the glossy prints to sculpt the contours and shape for a scene requiring a miniature version of 007. GoldenEye (1995) is the seventeenth spy film in the James Bond series, and the first to star Pierce Brosnan as the fictional MI6 agent James Bond. The film was directed by Martin Campbell and is the first film in the series not to take story elements from the works of novelist Ian Fleming.
    bond_modeller-12-03-1995_1.jpg
  • Turner Prize nominated Lubaina Himid MBE with her Jelly Mould Pavilion on Folkestone’s sea front as part of the 2017 Folkestone Triennial. Folkestone, Kent. Lubaina Himid created a Jelly Mould Pavilion on Folkestone’s sea front, on the former ‘Rotunda’ site of the town’s fun fair, Lido and amusement park where the sugar of candy floss and toffee apples fuelled summer visitors. The pavilion’s colourful decoration in the artist’s signature patterning will serve as a reminder of the lost amusement park, as well as providing a beautiful shelter at the edge of the town to rest, look out to sea, and think about the role of sugar in Britain’s history. Folkestone, Kent.
    UK-Art-2017-Folkestone-Triennial-Lub...jpg
  • Turner Prize nominated Lubaina Himid MBE with her Jelly Mould Pavilion on Folkestone’s sea front as part of the 2017 Folkestone Triennial. Folkestone, Kent. Lubaina Himid created a Jelly Mould Pavilion on Folkestone’s sea front, on the former ‘Rotunda’ site of the town’s fun fair, Lido and amusement park where the sugar of candy floss and toffee apples fuelled summer visitors. The pavilion’s colourful decoration in the artist’s signature patterning will serve as a reminder of the lost amusement park, as well as providing a beautiful shelter at the edge of the town to rest, look out to sea, and think about the role of sugar in Britain’s history. Folkestone, Kent.
    UK-Art-2017-Folkestone-Triennial-Lub...jpg
  • Turner Prize nominated Lubaina Himid MBE with her Jelly Mould Pavilion on Folkestone’s sea front as part of the 2017 Folkestone Triennial. Folkestone, Kent. Lubaina Himid created a Jelly Mould Pavilion on Folkestone’s sea front, on the former ‘Rotunda’ site of the town’s fun fair, Lido and amusement park where the sugar of candy floss and toffee apples fuelled summer visitors. The pavilion’s colourful decoration in the artist’s signature patterning will serve as a reminder of the lost amusement park, as well as providing a beautiful shelter at the edge of the town to rest, look out to sea, and think about the role of sugar in Britain’s history. Folkestone, Kent.
    UK-Art-2017-Folkestone-Triennial-Lub...jpg
  • Turner Prize nominated Lubaina Himid MBE with her Jelly Mould Pavilion on Folkestone’s sea front as part of the 2017 Folkestone Triennial. Folkestone, Kent. Lubaina Himid created a Jelly Mould Pavilion on Folkestone’s sea front, on the former ‘Rotunda’ site of the town’s fun fair, Lido and amusement park where the sugar of candy floss and toffee apples fuelled summer visitors. The pavilion’s colourful decoration in the artist’s signature patterning will serve as a reminder of the lost amusement park, as well as providing a beautiful shelter at the edge of the town to rest, look out to sea, and think about the role of sugar in Britain’s history. Folkestone, Kent.
    UK-Art-2017-Folkestone-Triennial-Lub...jpg
  • Turner Prize nominated Lubaina Himid MBE with her Jelly Mould Pavilion on Folkestone’s sea front as part of the 2017 Folkestone Triennial. Folkestone, Kent. Lubaina Himid created a Jelly Mould Pavilion on Folkestone’s sea front, on the former ‘Rotunda’ site of the town’s fun fair, Lido and amusement park where the sugar of candy floss and toffee apples fuelled summer visitors. The pavilion’s colourful decoration in the artist’s signature patterning will serve as a reminder of the lost amusement park, as well as providing a beautiful shelter at the edge of the town to rest, look out to sea, and think about the role of sugar in Britain’s history. Folkestone, Kent.
    UK-Art-2017-Folkestone-Triennial-Lub...jpg
  • Turner Prize nominated Lubaina Himid MBE with her Jelly Mould Pavilion on Folkestone’s sea front as part of the 2017 Folkestone Triennial. Folkestone, Kent. Lubaina Himid created a Jelly Mould Pavilion on Folkestone’s sea front, on the former ‘Rotunda’ site of the town’s fun fair, Lido and amusement park where the sugar of candy floss and toffee apples fuelled summer visitors. The pavilion’s colourful decoration in the artist’s signature patterning will serve as a reminder of the lost amusement park, as well as providing a beautiful shelter at the edge of the town to rest, look out to sea, and think about the role of sugar in Britain’s history. Folkestone, Kent.
    UK-Art-2017-Folkestone-Triennial-Lub...jpg
  • Turner Prize nominated Lubaina Himid MBE with her Jelly Mould Pavilion on Folkestone’s sea front as part of the 2017 Folkestone Triennial. Folkestone, Kent. Lubaina Himid created a Jelly Mould Pavilion on Folkestone’s sea front, on the former ‘Rotunda’ site of the town’s fun fair, Lido and amusement park where the sugar of candy floss and toffee apples fuelled summer visitors. The pavilion’s colourful decoration in the artist’s signature patterning will serve as a reminder of the lost amusement park, as well as providing a beautiful shelter at the edge of the town to rest, look out to sea, and think about the role of sugar in Britain’s history. Folkestone, Kent.
    UK-Art-2017-Folkestone-Triennial-Lub...jpg
  • The detailed interior of Lubaina Himid’s Jelly Mould Pavilion on Folkestone’s sea front as part of the 2017 Folkestone Triennial. Folkestone, Kent. Lubaina Himid created a Jelly Mould Pavilion on Folkestone’s sea front, on the former ‘Rotunda’ site of the town’s fun fair, Lido and amusement park where the sugar of candy floss and toffee apples fuelled summer visitors. The pavilion’s colourful decoration in the artist’s signature patterning will serve as a reminder of the lost amusement park, as well as providing a beautiful shelter at the edge of the town to rest, look out to sea, and think about the role of sugar in Britain’s history. Folkestone, Kent.
    UK-Art-2017-Folkestone-Triennial-Lub...jpg
  • Turner Prize nominated Lubaina Himid MBE during the construction of her Jelly Mould Pavilion on Folkestone’s sea front as part of the 2017 Folkestone Triennial. Folkestone, Kent. Lubaina Himid created a Jelly Mould Pavilion on Folkestone’s sea front, on the former ‘Rotunda’ site of the town’s fun fair, Lido and amusement park where the sugar of candy floss and toffee apples fuelled summer visitors. The pavilion’s colourful decoration in the artist’s signature patterning will serve as a reminder of the lost amusement park, as well as providing a beautiful shelter at the edge of the town to rest, look out to sea, and think about the role of sugar in Britain’s history. Folkestone, Kent.
    UK-Art-2017-Folkestone-Triennial-Lub...jpg
  • Turner Prize nominated Lubaina Himid MBE during the construction of her Jelly Mould Pavilion on Folkestone’s sea front as part of the 2017 Folkestone Triennial. Folkestone, Kent. Lubaina Himid created a Jelly Mould Pavilion on Folkestone’s sea front, on the former ‘Rotunda’ site of the town’s fun fair, Lido and amusement park where the sugar of candy floss and toffee apples fuelled summer visitors. The pavilion’s colourful decoration in the artist’s signature patterning will serve as a reminder of the lost amusement park, as well as providing a beautiful shelter at the edge of the town to rest, look out to sea, and think about the role of sugar in Britain’s history. Folkestone, Kent.
    UK-Art-2017-Folkestone-Triennial-Lub...jpg
  • A medic from the Air Ambulance service demonstrates the rescusitation with a mannequin on a float passing  the newly-elected Lord Mayor of London during the Lord Mayor's Show. The new Mayor’s procession consists of a 3-mile, 150-float parade of commercial and military organisations going back to medieval times. This is the oldest and longest civic procession in the world that has survived the Plague and the Blitz, today one of the best-loved pageants. Henry Fitz-Ailwyn was the first Lord Mayor (1189-1212) and ever since, eminent city fathers (and one woman) have taken the role of the sovereign’s representative in the City – London’s ancient, self-governing financial district. The role ensured the King had an ally within the prosperous enclave.
    lord_mayors_show21-10-11-2012.jpg
  • A male mannequin holds a baby in the wondow of a tourist shop in Dorsoduro, a district of Venice, Italy. With a sexy pouch saying 'Love my start-up' the male holds the child in one arm. In the background are the sunlit buildings of the Piazza Sant Angelo in the San Marco district.
    venice_09-21-07-2015_1.jpg
  • A call centre agent admires the view as sun breaks through after a downpour: The poster on the window relates to Donald Trump a possible role model for an office workers on account of a his vast wealth. From the series Desk Job, a project which explores globalisation through office life around the World.
    566listeningco12_306_1.jpg
  • An airline flight-engineer occupies his own seat in the cockpit of a Boeing 747 - before the era arrived when technology made his role as a third flight crew member redundant. With a bowl of fresh fruit beside his seat, the male member of the flight-deck crew watches instruments and readings in front of the unseen pilots at the front. Wearing the three stripes designating his rank and seniority within his unspecified airline, the specialist's skills are in engineering systems that maintain efficient flight. When introduced, the Boeing 747-400 model was equipped with a two-crew glass cockpit, which dispensed with the need for a flight engineer - many of whom lost their jobs or retrained as pilots themselves.
    flight_engineer01-07-08-2000_1.jpg
  • A young woman awaits a bus in front of a large ad billboard for the Body fragrance Burberry Group plc. a British luxury fashion house, manufacturing clothing, fragrance, and fashion accessories. Rosie Alice Huntington-Whiteley (born 18 April 1987) is an English model and actress unveiled as the face of Burberry's newest fragrance, Burberry Body, in July 2011 but also best known for her work for Victoria's Secret, Burberry, and her role as Carly Spencer in the 2011 film Transformers: Dark of the Moon, part of the Transformers film series
    burberry_ad2-20-10-2011_1.jpg
  • A young woman walks through a pool of sunlight in front of a giant Burberry poster girl ad of the actress Rosie Alice Huntington-Whiteley in central London. It is lunchtime and the woman passes-by with a snack and a coffee, wearing a blue dress and with her long blonde hair trailing in the afternoon breeze. Burberry Group plc is a British luxury fashion house, manufacturing clothing, fragrance, and fashion accessories. Rosie Alice Huntington-Whiteley (born 18 April 1987) is an English model and actress unveiled as the face of Burberry's newest fragrance, Burberry Body, in July 2011 but also best known for her work for Victoria's Secret, Burberry, and her role as Carly Spencer in the 2011 film Transformers: Dark of the Moon, part of the Transformers film series
    burberry_girl3-28-09-2011_1.jpg
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