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  • Sheep cheese in a bowl on a table covered with a plastic flowery tablecloth in a stana (sheepfold), Lunca Ilvei, Romania. Each flock of around 500 sheep is based at a stana or sheepfold, a hut in a clearing with a milking enclosure of hurdles. In Romania wool and meat are seen as by-products and the real purpose of the flock is to produce branza or cheese.
    09_1.jpg
  • In the middle of a field serving as a grass car park, three couples celebrate the Ladies' Day event at Royal Ascot. Holding their glasses to toast a grand day out at this annual sporting event in the social calendar, the gentlemen are dressed in formal top hats and tails, the ladies in wide hats and summer dresses. Grinning and looking smug in their upp-class social status, they are seated eccentrically and comically around a plastic table with a tablecloth, two Candelabras and their picnic lunch plates full of fine food.
    RB_010-19-06-2008.jpg
  • On table 3, a holiday couple enjoy a full English cooked breakfast in the bay window of a Bed & Breakfast (B+B) in the Devon seaside resort of Paignton. Seated in the bright area that overlooks the seafront, beach huts and the calm sea in the distance. On the gingham tablecloth is a traditional English tea pot, toast rack and jam and they tuck into slices of white bread toast accompanied by orange juice. A No Vacancies sign hangs in the window for potential guests to spot as they walk the promenade.
    bed_and_breakfast02-21-07-1992_1.jpg
  • A table of food leftovers, the remnants of Christmas excess on Christmas Day, on 25th December 2020 in London, England. Christmas lunch or dinner in the UK is the main meal during the December Christian celebration, when families traditionally come together for the high-protein turkey and high-fibre vegetables - one of the most nutritious meals of the year.
    family_christmas07-25-12-2020.jpg
  • Members of a British family help themselves to a turkey and vegetables Christmas Day lunch, on 25th December 2020 in London, England. Christmas lunch or dinner in the UK is the main meal during the December Christian celebration, when families traditionally come together for the high-protein turkey and high-fibre vegetables - one of the most nutritious meals of the year.
    family_christmas01-25-12-2020.jpg
  • A table of food leftovers, the remains of Christmas excess on Christmas Day, on 25th December 2020 in London, England.Christmas lunch or dinner in the UK is the main meal during the December Christian celebration, when families traditionally come together for the high-protein turkey and high-fibre vegetables - one of the most nutritious meals of the year.
    family_christmas12-25-12-2020.jpg
  • An empty plate, wine glass and a table of food leftovers, the remnants of Christmas excess on Christmas Day, on 25th December 2020 in London, England. Christmas lunch or dinner in the UK is the main meal during the December Christian celebration, when families traditionally come together for the high-protein turkey and high-fibre vegetables - one of the most nutritious meals of the year.
    family_christmas09-25-12-2020.jpg
  • A table of food leftovers, the remnants of Christmas excess on Christmas Day, on 25th December 2020 in London, England. Christmas lunch or dinner in the UK is the main meal during the December Christian celebration, when families traditionally come together for the high-protein turkey and high-fibre vegetables - one of the most nutritious meals of the year.
    family_christmas05-25-12-2020.jpg
  • A young woman tries to solve a cracker novelty puzzle after a family lunch on Christmas Day, on 25th December 2020 in London, England. Christmas lunch or dinner in the UK is the main meal during the December Christian celebration, when families traditionally come together for the high-protein turkey and high-fibre vegetables - one of the most nutritious meals of the year.
    family_christmas10-25-12-2020.jpg
  • Members of a British family help themselves to a turkey and vegetables Christmas Day lunch, on 25th December 2020 in London, England. Christmas lunch or dinner in the UK is the main meal during the December Christian celebration, when families traditionally come together for the high-protein turkey and high-fibre vegetables - one of the most nutritious meals of the year.
    family_christmas04-25-12-2020.jpg
  • Members of a British family help themselves to a turkey and vegetables Christmas Day lunch, on 25th December 2020 in London, England. Christmas lunch or dinner in the UK is the main meal during the December Christian celebration, when families traditionally come together for the high-protein turkey and high-fibre vegetables - one of the most nutritious meals of the year.
    family_christmas03-25-12-2020.jpg
  • A table of food leftovers, the remains of Christmas excess on Christmas Day, on 25th December 2019, in Bristol, England.
    christmas_table-03-25-12-2019.jpg
  • No turkey left on an empty plate after a family Christmas Day lunch in south London, on 25th December 2020 in London, England. Christmas lunch or dinner in the UK is the main meal during the December Christian celebration, when families traditionally come together for the high-protein turkey and high-fibre vegetables - one of the most nutritious meals of the year.
    family_christmas08-25-12-2020.jpg
  • A basket of Deborah Devonshire's hens eggs in a basket on the kitchen table at her home on Chatsworth Estate.
    L1000671cc_1.jpg
  • A roadside stall selling mushrooms gathered from the forests in the Carpathian Mountains, Romania. Foraging for wild food is an important part of the subsistence farmers way of life and they know where to find different items in the fields and forests around the village.
    238-06_1.jpg
  • A table of food leftovers, the remains of Christmas excess on Christmas Day, on 25th December 2019, in Bristol, England.
    christmas_table-02-25-12-2019.jpg
  • Ropa Vieja, which literally translated means old Clothes, is a traditional Cuban dish made of beef and served with plantain chips. This is an excellent example from Paladar Dona Eustacia in the Cathedral Square in Havana old town.
    _MG_4164_1.jpg
  • Two women sit at a table and talk outside a restaurant in Verona, Italy
    SFE_110902_008.jpg
  • It is tea 4 o'clock and time for cream tea at the Westbury hotel in central London. Served by a waiter who pours from a silver pot into china cups, three ladies enjoy the afternoon after a day's shopping in nearby shopping streets. The decor is classically dark English wood and the tablecloth is crisply white with a scones with jam and sponges.
    tea_time-01-05-1989_1_1.jpg
  • Na Kia, an elderly Hmong women from Ban Kok Wa village makes a bag with an elephant design to sell at the Luang Prabang night market, Lao PDR. The Hmong have recently settled in the town of Luang Prabang - a consequence of the government’s efforts to suppress both the cultivation of opium poppies and slash and burn agriculture, which they have traditionally practiced, and of their own desire to take advantage of the expansion of tourism, which provides an important outlet for their crafts. Using their skilful embroidering and combining the sophisticated, colourful motifs that have traditionally adorned their clothing they have created aprons, tablecloths, cushion and bed covers, slippers and more which they sell to tourists at the Luang Prabang night market.
    A0010352cc_1.jpg
  • A young Hmong ethnic minority woman breastfeeds her 2 month old baby inbetween making textile products to sell at the Luang Prabang night market, Ban Na Ouane village, Luang Prabang province, Lao PDR. The Hmong have recently settled in the town of Luang Prabang - a consequence of the government’s efforts to suppress both the cultivation of opium poppies and slash and burn agriculture, which they have traditionally practiced, and of their own desire to take advantage of the expansion of tourism, which provides an important outlet for their crafts. These women have developed an artisanal textile industry based on their remarkable heritage.  Using their skilful embroidering and combining the sophisticated, colourful motifs that have traditionally adorned their clothing they have created aprons, tablecloths, cushion and bed covers, slippers and more which they sell to tourists at the Luang Prabang night market.
    A0010087cc_1.jpg
  • A handmade child's bib made by Hmong ethnic minority women for sale at the Luang Prabang night market, Lao PDR. The Hmong have recently settled in the town of Luang Prabang - a consequence of the government’s efforts to suppress both the cultivation of opium poppies and slash and burn agriculture, which they have traditionally practiced, and of their own desire to take advantage of the expansion of tourism, which provides an important outlet for their crafts. Using their skilful embroidering and combining the sophisticated, colourful motifs that have traditionally adorned their clothing they have created aprons, tablecloths, cushion and bed covers, slippers and more which they sell to tourists at the Luang Prabang night market.
    A 5748_1_1.jpg
  • A handmade child's bib made by a Hmong ethnic minority woman for sale at the Luang Prabang night market, Lao PDR. The Hmong have recently settled in the town of Luang Prabang - a consequence of the government’s efforts to suppress both the cultivation of opium poppies and slash and burn agriculture, which they have traditionally practiced, and of their own desire to take advantage of the expansion of tourism, which provides an important outlet for their crafts. Using their skilful embroidering and combining the sophisticated, colourful motifs that have traditionally adorned their clothing they have created aprons, tablecloths, cushion and bed covers, slippers and more which they sell to tourists at the Luang Prabang night market.
    A 5753_1_1.jpg
  • Mai Xiang, an elderly Hmong women from Ban Kok Wa villagemakes textile products with an elephant appliqué design to sell at the Luang Prabang night market, Lao PDR. The Hmong have recently settled in the town of Luang Prabang - a consequence of the government’s efforts to suppress both the cultivation of opium poppies and slash and burn agriculture, which they have traditionally practiced, and of their own desire to take advantage of the expansion of tourism, which provides an important outlet for their crafts. Using their skilful embroidering and combining the sophisticated, colourful motifs that have traditionally adorned their clothing they have created aprons, tablecloths, cushion and bed covers, slippers and more which they sell to tourists at the Luang Prabang night market.
    A0010433cc_1.jpg
  • A Hmong woman accompanied by her young son, from Ban Long Lao village, make textile products with a cross stitch design to sell at the Luang Prabang night market, Lao PDR. The Hmong have recently settled in the town of Luang Prabang - a consequence of the government’s efforts to suppress both the cultivation of opium poppies and slash and burn agriculture, which they have traditionally practiced, and of their own desire to take advantage of the expansion of tourism, which provides an important outlet for their crafts. Using their skilful embroidering and combining the sophisticated, colourful motifs that have traditionally adorned their clothing they have created aprons, tablecloths, cushion and bed covers, slippers and more which they sell to tourists at the Luang Prabang night market.
    A0010383cc_1.jpg
  • 3 generations of Hmong women make textile products in Ban Kok Wa village to sell at the Luang Prabang night market, Lao PDR.The Hmong have recently settled in the town of Luang Prabang - a consequence of the government’s efforts to suppress both the cultivation of opium poppies and slash and burn agriculture, which they have traditionally practiced, and of their own desire to take advantage of the expansion of tourism, which provides an important outlet for their crafts. These women have developed an artisanal textile industry based on their remarkable heritage.  Using their skilful embroidering and combining the sophisticated, colourful motifs that have traditionally adorned their clothing they have created aprons, tablecloths, cushion and bed covers, slippers and more which they sell to tourists at the Luang Prabang night market.
    A0010335cc_1.jpg
  • Yee Song, an elderly Hmong women from Ban Kok Wa village makes textile products with a cross stitch design to sell at the Luang Prabang night market, Lao PDR. The Hmong have recently settled in the town of Luang Prabang - a consequence of the government’s efforts to suppress both the cultivation of opium poppies and slash and burn agriculture, which they have traditionally practiced, and of their own desire to take advantage of the expansion of tourism, which provides an important outlet for their crafts. Using their skilful embroidering and combining the sophisticated, colourful motifs that have traditionally adorned their clothing they have created aprons, tablecloths, cushion and bed covers, slippers and more which they sell to tourists at the Luang Prabang night market.<br />
<br />
Portrait of Yee Song,
    A0010162cc_1.jpg
  • Weaving a woollen yathra blanket on a Tibetan style loom in Chumey village, Bumthang, Central Bhutan. Yathra is a hand woven fabric made from the wool of sheep and yak and is the most famous textile product of Bumthang. Yathra cloth is made into skarfs, jackets, blankets, tablecloths and bags.
    A0030888cc_1.jpg
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