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  • A Sasak woman cleans black sticky rice outside her home in Tetebatu, Lombok, Indonesia. The predominantly Muslim Sasak people are the native inhabitants of Lombok where they form 85% of the population.
    A0030157cc_1.jpg
  • A Sasak woman cleans black sticky rice outside her home in Tetebatu, Lombok, Indonesia. The predominantly Muslim Sasak people are the native inhabitants of Lombok where they form 85% of the population.
    A0030156cc_1.jpg
  • A Khmu ethnic minority woman pours sticky rice into a traditional wooden pestle in preparation for pounding prior to cooking in Ban Pakpok, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. Her family have recently moved from their remote moutain village to Ban Pakpok which is located on a road nearby Nam Ou Cascade Hydropower Project Dam 5 construction site.
    A0028119cc_1.jpg
  • A Khmu man weaving a bamboo sticky rice basket outside his home in Ban Phatao, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. Renowned for their superior basket weaving skills, the Khmu belong to the Mon-Khmer language group considered to be the original inhabitants of Laos and are the largest ethnic minority with many sub-groups resident in all provinces of Northern Laos. Ban Phatao will soon be temporarily relocated away from the Nam Ou river due to the construction of the Nam Ou Cascade Hydropower Project Dam 5.
    A0027132cc_1.jpg
  • Cooking sticky rice in a bamboo steamer over a wood fire in Ban Chalern, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. The remote and roadless village of Ban Chalern is situated along Nam Ou river and will be relocated due to the construction of the Nam Ou Cascade Hydropower Project Dam 7.
    A0026367cc_1.jpg
  • A Hmong woman harvesting 'khao kam' (brown sticky rice) in the village of Ban Chalern, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. Slash and burn cultivation or ‘hai’ in Lao PDR consists of cutting the natural vegetation, leaving it to dry and then burning it for temporary cropping of the land, the ash acting as a natural fertiliser. Shifting cultivation practices, although remarkably sustainable and adapted to their environment in the past, have come under increasing stress in recent decades and are now starting to be a major problem in Lao PDR, causing widespread deforestation and watershed degradation. The remote and roadless village of Ban Chalern is situated along  Nam Ou river and will be relocated due to the construction of the Nam Ou Cascade Hydropower Project Dam 7.
    A0026229cc_1.jpg
  • A Hmong woman harvesting 'khao kam' (brown sticky rice) in the village of Ban Chalern, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. Slash and burn cultivation or ‘hai’ in Lao PDR consists of cutting the natural vegetation, leaving it to dry and then burning it for temporary cropping of the land, the ash acting as a natural fertiliser. Shifting cultivation practices, although remarkably sustainable and adapted to their environment in the past, have come under increasing stress in recent decades and are now starting to be a major problem in Lao PDR, causing widespread deforestation and watershed degradation. The remote and roadless village of Ban Chalern is situated along  Nam Ou river and will be relocated due to the construction of the Nam Ou Cascade Hydropower Project Dam 7.
    A0026340cc_1.jpg
  • Local boatman/fisherman, Savath cooks sticky rice for breakfast, the Nam Ou river, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. The Nam Ou river connects small riverside villages and provides the rural population with food for fishing. But this river and others like it, that are the lifeline of rural communities and local economies are being blocked, diverted and decimated by dams. The Lao government hopes to transform the country into ‘the battery of Southeast Asia’ by exporting the power to Thailand and Vietnam.
    A0025993cc_1.jpg
  • A Khmu man weaving a bamboo sticky rice basket whilst his wife smokes a homemade cigarette outside their home in Ban Phatao, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. Renowned for their superior basket weaving skills, the Khmu belong to the Mon-Khmer language group considered to be the original inhabitants of Laos and are the largest ethnic minority with many sub-groups resident in all provinces of Northern Laos. Ban Phatao will soon be temporarily relocated away from the Nam Ou river due to the construction of the Nam Ou Cascade Hydropower Project Dam 5.
    DSCF2828cc_1.jpg
  • A Hmong woman harvesting 'khao kam' (brown sticky rice) in the village of Ban Chalern, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. Slash and burn cultivation or ‘hai’ in Lao PDR consists of cutting the natural vegetation, leaving it to dry and then burning it for temporary cropping of the land, the ash acting as a natural fertiliser. Shifting cultivation practices, although remarkably sustainable and adapted to their environment in the past, have come under increasing stress in recent decades and are now starting to be a major problem in Lao PDR, causing widespread deforestation and watershed degradation. The remote and roadless village of Ban Chalern is situated along  Nam Ou river and will be relocated due to the construction of the Nam Ou Cascade Hydropower Project Dam 7.
    A0026317cc_1.jpg
  • Hmong women harvesting 'khao kam' (brown sticky rice) in the village of Ban Chalern, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. Slash and burn cultivation or ‘hai’ in Lao PDR consists of cutting the natural vegetation, leaving it to dry and then burning it for temporary cropping of the land, the ash acting as a natural fertiliser. Shifting cultivation practices, although remarkably sustainable and adapted to their environment in the past, have come under increasing stress in recent decades and are now starting to be a major problem in Lao PDR, causing widespread deforestation and watershed degradation. The remote and roadless village of Ban Chalern is situated along  Nam Ou river and will be relocated due to the construction of the Nam Ou Cascade Hydropower Project Dam 7.
    A0026218cc_1.jpg
  • The boatmen/fishermen's lunch of sticky rice and freshly caught fish cooked over an open fire for lunch alongside the Nam Ou river, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. The Nam Ou river connects small riverside villages and provides the rural population with food for fishing. But this river and others like it, that are the lifeline of rural communities and local economies are being blocked, diverted and decimated by dams. The Lao government hopes to transform the country into ‘the battery of Southeast Asia’ by exporting the power to Thailand and Vietnam.
    A0026015cc_1.jpg
  • Coconut sticky rice cooked in bamboo for sale at the That Luang Festival, Vientiane, Lao PDR.
    DSCF3094cc_1.jpg
  • A Hmong woman checking her rice whilst harvesting 'khao kam' (brown sticky rice) in the village of Ban Chalern, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. Slash and burn cultivation or ‘hai’ in Lao PDR consists of cutting the natural vegetation, leaving it to dry and then burning it for temporary cropping of the land, the ash acting as a natural fertiliser. Shifting cultivation practices, although remarkably sustainable and adapted to their environment in the past, have come under increasing stress in recent decades and are now starting to be a major problem in Lao PDR, causing widespread deforestation and watershed degradation. The remote and roadless village of Ban Chalern is situated along  Nam Ou river and will be relocated due to the construction of the Nam Ou Cascade Hydropower Project Dam 7.
    A0026352cc_1.jpg
  • A Hmong woman harvesting 'khao kam' (brown sticky rice) in the village of Ban Chalern, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. Slash and burn cultivation or ‘hai’ in Lao PDR consists of cutting the natural vegetation, leaving it to dry and then burning it for temporary cropping of the land, the ash acting as a natural fertiliser. Shifting cultivation practices, although remarkably sustainable and adapted to their environment in the past, have come under increasing stress in recent decades and are now starting to be a major problem in Lao PDR, causing widespread deforestation and watershed degradation. The remote and roadless village of Ban Chalern is situated along  Nam Ou river and will be relocated due to the construction of the Nam Ou Cascade Hydropower Project Dam 7.
    A0026236cc_1.jpg
  • A Hmong woman harvesting 'khao kam' (brown sticky rice) in the village of Ban Chalern, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. Slash and burn cultivation or ‘hai’ in Lao PDR consists of cutting the natural vegetation, leaving it to dry and then burning it for temporary cropping of the land, the ash acting as a natural fertiliser. Shifting cultivation practices, although remarkably sustainable and adapted to their environment in the past, have come under increasing stress in recent decades and are now starting to be a major problem in Lao PDR, causing widespread deforestation and watershed degradation. The remote and roadless village of Ban Chalern is situated along  Nam Ou river and will be relocated due to the construction of the Nam Ou Cascade Hydropower Project Dam 7.
    A0026228cc_1.jpg
  • A Sasak woman cleans black sticky rice outside her home in Tetebatu, Lombok, Indonesia. The predominantly Muslim Sasak people are the native inhabitants of Lombok where they form 85% of the population.
    A0030161cc_1.jpg
  • A Khmu ethnic minority woman pounds sticky rice with a traditional wooden mortar and pestle outside her home in Ban Pakpok, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. Her family have recently moved from their remote mountain village to the riverside village of Ban Pakpok which is located on a road nearby Nam Ou Cascade Hydropower Project Dam 5 construction site.
    A0028114cc_1.jpg
  • Vendor selling sticky rice wrapped in banana leaves in front of the fruit stall at Kandal morning market in Phnom Penh, the capital city of Cambodia. A large variety of local products are available for sale in fresh markets all over Cambodia, all being sold on small individual stalls.
    DSCF6248cc_1.jpg
  • Coconut sticky rice cooked in bamboo for sale at Khua Din morning market in Vientiane city, Lao PDR. A large variety of local products are available for sale in fresh markets all over Laos, all being sold on small individual stalls. Talat Khua Din is a traditional Lao market close to Vientiane city centre and is currently under threat from the construction of a shopping mall.
    DSCF0753_1.jpg
  • A baker presses his hands deep into a mixture of dough, to become Italian Ciabatta bread. As his fingers sink into the mixture, we get a sense of how thick and sticky the blend of flour and water plus secret ingredients have become. Pressing down into the dough, the man’s skin is of African or afro-Caribbean origin, clearly made out in the white of the mix, his white baker’s uniform’s sleeves also spattered with flour. Ciabatta (literally "carpet slipper") is an Italian white bread made with wheat flour and yeast. The loaf is somewhat elongated, broad and flattish. Its name is the Italian word for slipper. There are many variations of ciabatta. Ciabatta in its modern form was developed in 1982. Since the late 1990s it has been popular across Europe and in the United States, and is widely used as sandwich bread.
    baker_dough01-16-03-1989_1.jpg
  • Making traditional 'Khao Papa' sticky rice cakes for the 'man festival' in the White Lahu / Mussur Khao ethnic minority village of Ban Huay San, Bokeo province, Lao PDR. One of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia, Laos has 49 officially recognised ethnic groups although there are many more self-identified and sub groups. These groups are distinguished by their own customs, beliefs and rituals.
    DSCF4862cc_1.jpg
  • A small sticky rice cake wrapped in leaves from Shui Tang village market; Guizhou province, China.
    A 5096_1.jpg
  • Sticky rice in bamboo at the morning vegetable market in Luang Prabang, Lao PDR
    A0010519_1.jpg
  • A small sticky rice cake wrapped in maize leaves from Shui Tang village market; Guizhou province, China.
    A 5037_1.jpg
  • A large sticky rice cake wrapped in leaves from Sa La Xi village market; Guizhou province, China.
    A 5034_1.jpg
  • Pounding sticky rice with sesame to make traditional ‘khao papa’ for the 'man festival' in the White Lahu / Mussur Khao ethnic minority village of Ban Huay San, Bokeo province, Lao PDR. One of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia, Laos has 49 officially recognised ethnic groups although there are many more self-identified and sub groups. These groups are distinguished by their own customs, beliefs and rituals.
    DSCF4838cc_1.jpg
  • Vendor selling sticky rice wrapped in banana leaves in front of the fruit stall at Kandal morning market in Phnom Penh, the capital city of Cambodia. A large variety of local products are available for sale in fresh markets all over Cambodia, all being sold on small individual stalls.
    DSCF6248cc_1_1.jpg
  • Sticky Fly trap with dead flies hanging.
    5F3A5189_1.jpg
  • Buddhist monks collecting alms at the That Luang festival, Vientiane, Lao PDR. Pha That Luang is the national symbol and most important religious monument of Laos. Vientiane's most important Theravada Buddhist festival, "Boun That Luang", is held here for three days during the full moon of the twelfth lunar month (November). Monks and laypeople from all over Laos congregate to celebrate the occasion with three days of religious ceremony followed by a week of festivities, day and night. The procession of laypeople begins at Wat Si Muang in the city centre and proceeds to Pha That Luang to make offerings to the monks in order to accumulate merit for rebirth into a better life. The religious part concludes as laypeople, carrying incense and candles as offerings, circumambulate Pha That Luang three times in honor of Buddha.
    DSCF3009cc_1.jpg
  • Ricefields and landscape in Sisa'ath village in the Laos province of Vientiane. Over the past decade a paved road and electricity have improved life for the village’s 50 families. But alongside this welcome progress climate change has brought unprecedented and unpredictable new weather patterns, disrupting harvests and lifestyles in the farming-dependent community.
    DSCF0969cc_1.jpg
  • Alms giving (tak bat) at the That Luang festival, Vientiane, Lao PDR. Pha That Luang is the national symbol and most important religious monument of Laos. Vientiane's most important Theravada Buddhist festival, "Boun That Luang", is held here for three days during the full moon of the twelfth lunar month (November). Monks and laypeople from all over Laos congregate to celebrate the occasion with three days of religious ceremony followed by a week of festivities, day and night. The procession of laypeople begins at Wat Si Muang in the city centre and proceeds to Pha That Luang to make offerings to the monks in order to accumulate merit for rebirth into a better life. The religious part concludes as laypeople, carrying incense and candles as offerings, circumambulate Pha That Luang three times in honor of Buddha.
    DSCF3109cc_1.jpg
  • Alms giving (tak bat) at the That Luang festival, Vientiane, Lao PDR. Pha That Luang is the national symbol and most important religious monument of Laos. Vientiane's most important Theravada Buddhist festival, "Boun That Luang", is held here for three days during the full moon of the twelfth lunar month (November). Monks and laypeople from all over Laos congregate to celebrate the occasion with three days of religious ceremony followed by a week of festivities, day and night. The procession of laypeople begins at Wat Si Muang in the city centre and proceeds to Pha That Luang to make offerings to the monks in order to accumulate merit for rebirth into a better life. The religious part concludes as laypeople, carrying incense and candles as offerings, circumambulate Pha That Luang three times in honor of Buddha.
    DSCF3054cc_1.jpg
  • Monks collecting alms at the That Luang festival, Vientiane, Lao PDR. Pha That Luang is the national symbol and most important religious monument of Laos. Vientiane's most important Theravada Buddhist festival, "Boun That Luang", is held here for three days during the full moon of the twelfth lunar month (November). Monks and laypeople from all over Laos congregate to celebrate the occasion with three days of religious ceremony followed by a week of festivities, day and night. The procession of laypeople begins at Wat Si Muang in the city centre and proceeds to Pha That Luang to make offerings to the monks in order to accumulate merit for rebirth into a better life. The religious part concludes as laypeople, carrying incense and candles as offerings, circumambulate Pha That Luang three times in honor of Buddha.
    DSCF3072cc_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. Bouakham Bounmavilay (48), a widow with 4 children, has worked  as a technician for the Mines Advisory Group (MAG) in Xieng Khouang Province for a year. This is her first paid job.  It's MAGs policy to select from the local population  the poorest members of the community to be trained and employed as technicians. Bouakhams family has a small farm in Ban Naphia which has not yet been cleared of UXO. "My rice paddy is not completely safe but we don't have another place to grow rice", she says.
    A0012385cc_1_1.jpg
  • Buddhist monks collecting alms at the That Luang festival, Vientiane, Lao PDR. Pha That Luang is the national symbol and most important religious monument of Laos. Vientiane's most important Theravada Buddhist festival, "Boun That Luang", is held here for three days during the full moon of the twelfth lunar month (November). Monks and laypeople from all over Laos congregate to celebrate the occasion with three days of religious ceremony followed by a week of festivities, day and night. The procession of laypeople begins at Wat Si Muang in the city centre and proceeds to Pha That Luang to make offerings to the monks in order to accumulate merit for rebirth into a better life. The religious part concludes as laypeople, carrying incense and candles as offerings, circumambulate Pha That Luang three times in honor of Buddha.
    DSCF3124cc_1.jpg
  • Buddhist monks collecting alms at the That Luang festival, Vientiane, Lao PDR. Pha That Luang is the national symbol and most important religious monument of Laos. Vientiane's most important Theravada Buddhist festival, "Boun That Luang", is held here for three days during the full moon of the twelfth lunar month (November). Monks and laypeople from all over Laos congregate to celebrate the occasion with three days of religious ceremony followed by a week of festivities, day and night. The procession of laypeople begins at Wat Si Muang in the city centre and proceeds to Pha That Luang to make offerings to the monks in order to accumulate merit for rebirth into a better life. The religious part concludes as laypeople, carrying incense and candles as offerings, circumambulate Pha That Luang three times in honor of Buddha.
    DSCF3102cc_1.jpg
  • Alms giving (tak bat) at That Luang festival, Vientiane, Lao PDR. Pha That Luang is the national symbol and most important religious monument of Laos. Vientiane's most important Theravada Buddhist festival, "Boun That Luang", is held here for three days during the full moon of the twelfth lunar month (November). Monks and laypeople from all over Laos congregate to celebrate the occasion with three days of religious ceremony followed by a week of festivities, day and night. The procession of laypeople begins at Wat Si Muang in the city centre and proceeds to Pha That Luang to make offerings to the monks in order to accumulate merit for rebirth into a better life. The religious part concludes as laypeople, carrying incense and candles as offerings, circumambulate Pha That Luang three times in honor of Buddha.
    DSCF3077cc_1.jpg
  • A rice field of TDK8 improved variety which matures quicker than the traditional varieties, Namai village, Feung district, Vientiane province, Laos. The 210-year-old village, home to 878 people, has changed significantly over the past 15 years, with the arrival of a paved road, electricity and clean drinking water. But alongside this welcome progress climate change has brought unprecedented and unpredictable new weather patterns, disrupting harvests and lifestyles in this farming-dependent community.
    DSCF0826cc_1.jpg
  • Buddhist monks collecting alms at the That Luang festival, Vientiane, Lao PDR. Pha That Luang is the national symbol and most important religious monument of Laos. Vientiane's most important Theravada Buddhist festival, "Boun That Luang", is held here for three days during the full moon of the twelfth lunar month (November). Monks and laypeople from all over Laos congregate to celebrate the occasion with three days of religious ceremony followed by a week of festivities, day and night. The procession of laypeople begins at Wat Si Muang in the city centre and proceeds to Pha That Luang to make offerings to the monks in order to accumulate merit for rebirth into a better life. The religious part concludes as laypeople, carrying incense and candles as offerings, circumambulate Pha That Luang three times in honor of Buddha.
    DSCF3005cc_1.jpg
  • Buddhist monks collecting alms at the That Luang festival, Vientiane, Lao PDR. Pha That Luang is the national symbol and most important religious monument of Laos. Vientiane's most important Theravada Buddhist festival, "Boun That Luang", is held here for three days during the full moon of the twelfth lunar month (November). Monks and laypeople from all over Laos congregate to celebrate the occasion with three days of religious ceremony followed by a week of festivities, day and night. The procession of laypeople begins at Wat Si Muang in the city centre and proceeds to Pha That Luang to make offerings to the monks in order to accumulate merit for rebirth into a better life. The religious part concludes as laypeople, carrying incense and candles as offerings, circumambulate Pha That Luang three times in honor of Buddha.
    DSCF2998cc_1.jpg
  • As a Dior employee oversees her company's PR event, an outdoor set is constructed for the Christian Dior fashion house in London's Bond Street during Vogue's Fashion's Night Out festival in the streets of the West End. A contracted workman wearing high-vis tabard vests put the finishing touches to a raised ramp that a Dior-sponsored taxi cab will be placed upon, complete with fake double-yellow lines. The fake road surface has been laid out after other workmen prepared a Dior street sign and staple parts of the ramp together.
    dior_show10-08-September-2011_1.jpg
  • The villagers of Ban Mouanghoun rise early for the daily Buddhist alms giving ceremony (tak bat) donating sticky rice to the monks for their one meal of the day, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR This is an ancient, religious tradition and those who give alms earn merit for their next life. Lao Buddhists are very devout and almost every Lao man joins a monastery, or temple, for at least a short period of time. Many men also become monks for the rest of their lives. The village will be relocated due to the construction of the Nam Ou Cascade Hydropower project Dam 5.
    A0027352cc_1.jpg
  • The villagers of Ban Mouanghoun rise early for the daily Buddhist alms giving ceremony (tak bat) donating sticky rice to the monks for their one meal of the day, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. This is an ancient, religious tradition and those who give alms earn merit for their next life. Lao Buddhists are very devout and almost every Lao man joins a monastery, or temple, for at least a short period of time. Many men also become monks for the rest of their lives. The village will be relocated due to the construction of the Nam Ou Cascade Hydropower project Dam 5.
    A0027341cc_1.jpg
  • A Khmu ethnic minority woman pounds sticky rice with a traditional wooden mortar and pestle outside her home in Ban Pakpok, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. Her family have recently moved from their remote mountain village to the riverside village of Ban Pakpok which is located on a road nearby Nam Ou Cascade Hydropower Project Dam 5 construction site.
    A0028127cc_1.jpg
  • Farmer Bounthit Inthavong (59) at home in Tao Than village, Vientiane Lao PDR. Bounthit and her husband Somvang (60) produce organic brown sticky rice, various kinds of bamboo, and fruit and vegetables including green beans, morning glory, lemons and mangos. This area has been hard hit by climate change over recent years and the farming-dependent family is feeling the effects.
    DSCF0767cc_1.jpg
  • Bounthit Inthavong, 59 in her vegetable garden in Tao Than village in the Laos province of Vientiane. This area has been hard hit by climate change over recent years and the farming-dependent family is feeling the effects. She and her husband Somvang Inthavong, 60, are farmers manage the farm alone and the children help at the weekends. They produce organic brown sticky rice, various kinds of bamboo, and fruit and vegetables including green beans, morning glory, lemons and mangos.
    A0031491cc_1.jpg
  • painful pants made from sticky "FRAGILE" tape, Glastonbury Festival 2010
    _MG_3877.jpg
  • As the UKs Coronavirus lockdown continues to ease, retailers re-open their doors to shoppers, an employee of a Levis shop on Regent Street, unpeels the sticky stencil lettering telling customers that their business has been missed, on 18th June 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_shops-14-18-06-2020.jpg
  • As the UKs Coronavirus lockdown continues to ease, retailers re-open their doors to shoppers, an employee of a Levis shop on Regent Street, unpeels the sticky stencil lettering telling customers that their business has been missed, on 18th June 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_shops-13-18-06-2020.jpg
  • As the UKs Coronavirus lockdown continues to ease, retailers re-open their doors to shoppers, an employee of a Levis shop on Regent Street awaits customers with hand sanitiser dispensers, and another unpeels the sticky stencil lettering telling customers that their business has been missed, on 18th June 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_shops-11-18-06-2020.jpg
  • Bounthit Inthavong, 59 in her vegetable garden in Tao Than village in the Laos province of Vientiane. This area has been hard hit by climate change over recent years and the farming-dependent family is feeling the effects. She and her husband Somvang Inthavong, 60, are farmers manage the farm alone and the children help at the weekends. They produce organic brown sticky rice, various kinds of bamboo, and fruit and vegetables including green beans, morning glory, lemons and mangos.
    A0031475cc_1.jpg
  • The villagers of Ban Mouanghoun rise early for the alms giving ceremony (tak bat) donating sticky rice to the monks for their one meal of the day, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. This is an ancient, religious tradition and those who give alms earn merit for their next life. Lao Buddhists are very devout and almost every Lao man joins a monastery, or temple, for at least a short period of time. Many men also become monks for the rest of their lives. The village will be relocated due to the construction of the Nam Ou Cascade Hydropower project Dam 5.
    A0027346cc_1.jpg
  • Sticky sweet tasting treats for sale at a stall in Pratunam, Bangkok. These sweets are shaped into the forms of many different varieties of chillies.
    2006-11-23_BKK Chilli Sweets_B_1.jpg
  • painful pants made from sticky "FRAGILE" tape, Glastonbury Festival 2010
    _MG_3877.jpg
  • With a further 155 reported UK Covid deaths in the last 24 hrs, a total now of 43,730, a detail of a social distance poster and an added sticky notice partially covering the covid travel information outside North Dulwich station, on 30th June 2020, in London, England.
    dulwich_village-02-30-06-2020.jpg
  • As the UKs Coronavirus lockdown continues to ease, retailers re-open their doors to shoppers, two young women wearing face coverings walk past an employee of a Levis shop on Regent Street who is unpeeling the sticky stencil lettering telling customers that their business has been missed, on 18th June 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_shops-03-18-06-2020.jpg
  • Farmers Somvang and Bounthit Inthavong weeding their rice field in Tao Than village, Vientiane Lao PDR. They produce organic brown sticky rice, various kinds of bamboo, and fruit and vegetables including green beans, morning glory, lemons and mangos. This area has been hard hit by climate change over recent years and the farming-dependent family is feeling the effects.
    A0031541cc_1.jpg
  • As the UKs Coronavirus lockdown continues to ease, retailers re-open their doors to shoppers, an employee of a Levis shop on Regent Street awaits customers with hand sanitiser dispensers, and another unpeels the sticky stencil lettering telling customers that their business has been missed, on 18th June 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_shops-08-18-06-2020.jpg
  • Sticky sweet tasting treats for sale at a stall in Pratunam, Bangkok, Thailand. These sweets are shaped into the forms of many different varieties of chillies.
    2006-11-23_BKK Chilli Sweets_A.jpg
  • Portrait of farmer Bounthit Inthavong (59) in her rice field in Tao Than village, Vientiane Lao PDR. Bounthit and her husband Somvang (60) produce organic brown sticky rice, various kinds of bamboo, and fruit and vegetables including green beans, morning glory, lemons and mangos. This area has been hard hit by climate change over recent years and the farming-dependent family is feeling the effects.
    A0031544cc_1.jpg
  • Villager holding an alms bowl containing sticky rice to donate to the monks for their one meal of the day during the early morning Buddhist alms giving ceremony (tak bat), Ban Mouanghoun, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. This is an ancient, religious tradition and those who give alms earn merit for their next life, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. Lao Buddhists are very devout and almost every Lao man joins a monastery, or temple, for at least a short period of time. Many men also become monks for the rest of their lives. The village will be relocated due to the construction of the Nam Ou Cascade Hydropower project Dam 5.
    A0027335cc_1.jpg
  • Sticky sweet tasting treats for sale at a stall in Pratunam, Bangkok. These sweets are shaped into the forms of many different varieties of chillies.
    2006-11-23_BKK Chilli Sweets_A_1.jpg
  • The villagers of Ban Mouanghoun rise early for the alms giving ceremony (tak bat) donating sticky rice to the monks for their one meal of the day, Phongsaly province, Lao PDR. This is an ancient, religious tradition and those who give alms earn merit for their next life. Lao Buddhists are very devout and almost every Lao man joins a monastery, or temple, for at least a short period of time. Many men also become monks for the rest of their lives. The village will be relocated due to the construction of the Nam Ou Cascade Hydropower project Dam 5.
    A0027355cc_1.jpg
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