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  • 800 varieties of plants, roots, bark, peel, leaves, etc. are stored by Chinese Herbalist Chen Yi He, he is able to dispense from his clinic, Xiao Meng Yang town, Yunnan province, China.
    chiherb_009_1.jpg
  • Anonymous wasabi retailer customers and healthy drinks varieties. With the window designs for these drinks obscuring the person's face, we see only his lower bodies as he sits on a stool in warm sunshine. The hashtag #wasabidrinks is stencilled on the glass to show examples of what this shop sells - all healthy alternatives to the coffees normally associated with city bars.
    wasabi_cafe03-13-08-2014.jpg
  • Anonymous wasabi retailer customers and healthy drinks varieties. With the window designs for these drinks obscuring the peoples' faces, we see only their lower bodies as they sit on stools in warm sunshine. The hashtag #wasabidrinks is stencilled on the glass to show examples of what this shop sells - all healthy alternatives to the coffees normally associated with city bars.
    wasabi_cafe01-13-08-2014.jpg
  • A detail of a herb garden in the grounds of Norwich Cathedral, Norfolk. Shrubs of many varieties and species grown for medicinal purposes as well as lavender for its scent and remedial properties, are growing together in this generic garden within the land owned by the Norwich Anglican diocese.
    herb_garden01-30-07-2013_1_1.jpg
  • Organic and wild mushrooms for sale. All sorts of varieties are on available in this varied selection.
    20100508mushroomsA.jpg
  • Exotic fish for sale catering for the Carribbean community in Brixton Market, London, UK. Snapper, Bream, Mullet and many other varieties are sold here.
    20140224_fish stall_A.jpg
  • Seafood, shellfish and fish for sale catering for the Carribbean community in Brixton Market, London, UK. Snapper, Bream, Mullet and many other varieties are sold here.
    20140114_brixton market_A.jpg
  • Pushing into position a kiosk selling multiple varieties of Smoothie fruit drinks on sale on Broadway, New York City. The two stallholders position their mobile business on the pavement (sidewalk) before opening for trade. Colourful images of fruit combinations are be seen wrapped around the sides of the trailer being wheeled on to the street corner opposite the Woolworth Building in Lower Manhattan.
    manhattan_broadway01-25-05-2014_1.jpg
  • Somerset eating apples warm in afternoon sunshine on shelves outside the Pony and Trap pub, October 8th 2017, in Chew Magna, Somerset, England.
    apple_shelves-03-08-10-2017.jpg
  • Somerset eating apples warm in afternoon sunshine on shelves outside the Pony and Trap pub, October 8th 2017, in Chew Magna, Somerset, England.
    apple_shelves-01-08-10-2017.jpg
  • Chen YiHe, Chinese Herbalist, studying the inventory of his remedies and potions in his clinic, Xiao Meng Yang town, Yunnan province, China.
    chiherb_033_1.jpg
  • Potions of snakes, centipedes and other rodents used in Chinese medicine for the cure of all manner of ailments, used in conjunction with other remedies such as: barks, herbs, leaves, roots, wood chippings, etc. on view and being used by a Chinese herbal doctor, in Xiao Meng Yang town, Xishuangbanna, China
    chiherb_027_1.jpg
  • Chen Yi He, Chinese Herbal doctor, weighing remedies and ingredients, in his clinic , Xiao Meng Yang town, Yunnan province, China.
    chiherb_013_1.jpg
  • Greyfriars Vineyard, The Hog’s Back, Puttenham, Surrey, UK. Greyfriars was originally planted in 1989 and has been producing grapes and wines for over 20 years. Well known for it's English sparkling wine, using traditional grapes such as Pinot Noir.
    20140421_greyfriars winery vineyardC.jpg
  • Greyfriars Vineyard, The Hog’s Back, Puttenham, Surrey, UK. Greyfriars was originally planted in 1989 and has been producing grapes and wines for over 20 years. Well known for it's English sparkling wine, using traditional grapes such as Pinot Noir.
    20140421_greyfriars winery vineyardB.jpg
  • A team of English tea-tasters employed by the tea company Lyons sample different blends for the PG Tips brand in the City of London, England UK. With variously-sourced teas from tea estate plantations, they smell, touch, sip, slurp then spit the hot drink out into a spittoon rather than swallow it many times repeatedly. Britons drink 35 million cups of PG Tips a day and world tea production is approximately 3.2 million tonnes a year. Kenya is the largest producer with Sri Lanka a close second. PG Tips is imported as single estate teas from around the world and blended in precise proportions set by the tea tasters to make blend 777, which can contain between 12 and 35 single estate teas at any one time depending on season.
    tea_tasting-14-02-1993_1_1.jpg
  • A team of English tea-tasters employed by the tea company Lyons sample different blends for the PG Tips brand in the City of London, England UK. With variously-sourced teas from tea estate plantations, they smell, touch, sip, slurp then spit the hot drink out into a spitoon rather than swallow it many times repeatedly. Britons drink 35 million cups of PG Tips a day and world tea production is approximately 3.2 million tonnes a year. Kenya is the largest producer with Sri Lanka a close second. PG Tips is imported as single estate teas from around the world and blended in precise proportions set by the tea tasters to make blend 777, which can contain between 12 and 35 single estate teas at any one time depending on season.
    RB_133-21-05-1993.jpg
  • Six months after the fall of the Berlin Wall, the last Trabant cars await buyers outside the factory production line, on 1st June 1990, in Zwickau, eastern Germany former DDR. The DDR-produced Trabant suffered poor performance, but its smoky two-stroke engine regarded with affection as a symbol of the more positive sides of East Germany. Many East Germans streamed into West Berlin and West Germany in their Trabants after the opening of the Berlin Wall. It was in production without any significant change for nearly 30 years. The name Trabant means fellow traveler in German.
    DDR_trabant-01-06-1990_2.jpg
  • A street portrait of a member of the Camisa family  showing us a selection of parmasan cheese and home-made pasta in Old Compton Street, Soho, London. This long-established rustic Italian deli was opened by the Fratelli Camisi back in 1929, and this old Soho stalwart is well worth a visit if only for its fresh pasta and accompanying sauces - their pesto is particularly good - but that would be to miss out on the fabulous range of cheeses (pecorino, gorgonzola - both sweet and piccante - parmesan, mozzarella, ricotta), charcuterie (salamis, mortadella, parma ham), freshly marinated olives, vegetables (artichokes, peppers, aubergines, sun-dried tomatoes, mushrooms) under oil, risotto rices, balsamic vinegars, cakes and biscuits, as well as a range of their own-label products.
    camisa_deli-13-05-1989_1.jpg
  • A surfer mannequin shows ice cream choices on his surfboard outside a beach cafe, on 13th September 2018, in Barmouth, Gwynedd, Wales.
    barmouth_surfer-01-13-09-2018.jpg
  • Greyfriars Vineyard, The Hog’s Back, Puttenham, Surrey, UK. Greyfriars was originally planted in 1989 and has been producing grapes and wines for over 20 years. Well known for it's English sparkling wine, using traditional grapes such as Pinot Noir.
    20140421_greyfriars winery vineyardF.jpg
  • Greyfriars Vineyard, The Hog’s Back, Puttenham, Surrey, UK. Greyfriars was originally planted in 1989 and has been producing grapes and wines for over 20 years. Well known for it's English sparkling wine, using traditional grapes such as Pinot Noir.
    20140421_greyfriars winery vineyardE.jpg
  • An elderly 1990s lady tries on a left show while standing over a choice of dozens of single items of footwear, in a daily market, on 11th May 1990, in Calais, France.
    shoe_market-11-05-1990.jpg
  • The Woolworth Building and a smoothie fruit drink kiosk on sale at 233 Broadway, New York City. As a cyclist passes-by, we see this mobile business on the pavement (sidewalk) before opening for trade. Colourful images of fruit combinations are be seen wrapped around the sides of the trailer on the street corner in Lower Manhattan. The Woolworth Building, at 233 Broadway, Manhattan, New York City, designed by architect Cass Gilbert and completed in 1913, is an early US skyscraper, designed in the neo-Gothic style by the architect Cass Gilbert for the company's new corporate headquarters on Broadway,  opposite City Hall. Originally designed to be 420 feet (130 m) high, the building was eventually elevated to 792 feet (241 m). At its opening, the Woolworth Building was 60 stories tall and had over 5,000 windows.
    manhattan_broadway04-25-05-2014_1.jpg
  • Greyfriars Vineyard, The Hog’s Back, Puttenham, Surrey, UK. Greyfriars was originally planted in 1989 and has been producing grapes and wines for over 20 years. Well known for it's English sparkling wine, using traditional grapes such as Pinot Meunier.
    20140421_greyfriars winery vineyardD.jpg
  • Greyfriars Vineyard, The Hog’s Back, Puttenham, Surrey, UK. Greyfriars was originally planted in 1989 and has been producing grapes and wines for over 20 years. Well known for it's English sparkling wine, using traditional grapes such as Pinot Noir.
    20140421_greyfriars winery vineyardA.jpg
  • Examples of bird wildlife to be found after the extensive conservation project at Barton Broad in the Norfolk Broads. The information board shows us the species and kinds of birdlife thriving in this wetland, a region of east Anglia known for its important natural habitats after decades of neglect. Birds such as Coot, Mallard, Moorhen, Tern and Grebe are all surviving thanks to investment and a commitment to protect native species. Barton Broad is the largest Broad in the Ant Valley. It is a man-made landscape impacted by natural processes - the open water is a result of flooded peat diggings. The fen habitat around Barton Broad contributes to the largest fenland expanse in the UK and contains rare vegetation.
    barton_broad02-01-08-2013_1_1.jpg
  • On stage, two beautiful topless girls stand semi-naked with a gentleman admirer during a variety show at the famous Parisian cabaret company Paradis Latin, Paris France. In front of glittery stars, the two ladies of the night are dressed in satin stockings and suspenders, flirting with this male dressed in top hat and tails, holding the hand of one lady and the about to kiss the cheek of the other, all the time lit with stage spotlights and the silhouetted heads of the front row audience at the bottom of the picture. The two girls appear to be twins but are probably wearing blonde wigs to make them look like a male 'Gentlemen prefer blondes' fantasy. (From a story about travelling through 6 European countries by coach in 7 days).
    RB_049-26-12-1994.jpg
  • On stage, a beautiful topless dancer with a gentleman admirer during a variety show at the famous Parisian cabaret company Paradis Latin, Paris France. In front of glittery stars, the ladies of the night are dressed in leotards and ballet tou-tous, flirting with this male dressed in top hat and tails with front row audience at the bottom of the picture like a male 'Gentlemen prefer blondes' fantasy.
    paris_cabaret1-26-12-1994.jpg
  • People outside Poundland pound shop in Birmingham, United Kingdom. Poundland is a British variety store chain founded in 1990 that sells most items in its stores for £1, stocking over 3,000 products and employing 18,000 staff. Like many of its rivals, Poundland operate a constantly rotating product line, including brand name and clearance items as well as many own brand.
    20170518_poundland birmingham_002.jpg
  • People outside Poundland pound shop in Birmingham, United Kingdom. Poundland is a British variety store chain founded in 1990 that sells most items in its stores for £1, stocking over 3,000 products and employing 18,000 staff. Like many of its rivals, Poundland operate a constantly rotating product line, including brand name and clearance items as well as many own brand.
    20170518_poundland birmingham_001.jpg
  • Schoolchildren of many ages and ethnic backgrounds spend their morning break-time in their school playground in inner-city London. Faces of a variety of skin colours and expressions look to the viewer as the kids delight in having their picture taken. Their cheeky, mischievous grins make us smile as we remember our own pre-technology childhoods, an era before computers took our natural sense of outdoor fun away.
    schoolchildren-12-06-1990.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-23-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-19-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-10-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-06-07-07-2020.jpg
  • A variety of locally produced fruit and vegetables on display in a greengrocer and connivence shop in Wadebridge, North Cornwall, United Kingdom. The blackboard informs that the store works “closely with local growers and suppliers to reduce food miles and support the local community”.
    UK-Village-Shop-Local-Produce-0136.jpg
  • People outside Poundland pound shop in Kings Heath, Birmingham, United Kingdom. Poundland is a British variety store chain founded in 1990 that sells most items in its stores for £1, stocking over 3,000 products and employing 18,000 staff. Like many of its rivals, Poundland operate a constantly rotating product line, including brand name and clearance items as well as many own brand.
    20170620_poundland_001.jpg
  • An adult business window displays the naughty underwear worn by five mannequin models of a Soho sex shop on Old Compton Street in London's West End. Tilted slightly to the left, we see the 5 models posing in various positions of suggestive stances, all demonstrating the shop's array of erotic clothing for the Good Time Girl! On the far right is the artwork of a topless woman, wearing only knee-length stockings. See from behind, the line-drawing of the female suggests a dancer on a Parisian stage act such as the Folies Bergere or Paradis Latin - variety performances for the male admirer. She looks over her left shoulder as if to wink in our direction, all part of the illusion of coquettish desire and greedy eroticism. Old Compton Street is known for cafes, bars and especially the gay, trans-gender scene and for sellers of erotic toy 'accessories'!
    electricity129-17-01-2008 _1.jpg
  • With afternoon sunshine backlighting the scene, a dog-walker with his animal companions walk past St. Martin's church steps in Trafalgar Square. A crowd of people are ahead and look on to the variety of breeds that are being exercised on the capital's streets - their shadows playing across the clean pavements.
    dog_walker01-19-11-2010_1.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-24-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-21-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-22-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-20-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-16-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-15-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-14-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-12-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-07-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-09-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-11-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-02-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-05-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-04-07-07-2020.jpg
  • The empty auditorium of the London Coliseum, home of English National Opera ENO, remains closed for performances during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 7th July 2020, in London, England. The UK’s theatre ticket revenue contributes £1.28bn to the nation’s economy, in which there are 290,000 jobs 70% are at risk so the government has announced a financial rescue package for the Arts industry, a £1.15bn support for cultural organisations in England that is made up of £880m in grants and £270m of repayable loans. But theatre and opera companies such as ENO, whose last performance was The Marriage of Figaro on 14th March, will stay closed for the foreseeable future until there are changes in social distance and safety guidelines. The 2,395-seat Coliseum 1904 is a Baroque revival Wrenaissance style theatre, built as one of West Ends largest and most luxurious variety theatres.
    coronavirus_coliseum-01-07-07-2020.jpg
  • Against the strong spotlight of the Big Top, a ringmaster announces the next act during an afternoon performance by the Gerry Cottle circus in North London. With his top hat perched firmly on his head and holding his microphone, the leader of his troupe smiles confidently and speaks with authority to the unseen audience who eagerly await the skills of acrobats or clowns who are about to enter the ring. In his scarlet red coat and holding a pair of gloves in his other hand, the man is the epitome of showmen – a picture of show businesses and variety, of the presenter from another era.
    circus_ringmaster-28-09-1990_1.jpg
  • A variety of locally produced fruit and vegetables on display in a greengrocer and connivence shop in Wadebridge, North Cornwall, United Kingdom. The blackboard informs that the store works “closely with local growers and suppliers to reduce food miles and support the local community”.
    UK-Village-Shop-Local-Produce-0133.jpg
  • Fishmongers at Borough Market in London, England, United Kingdom. Borough Market is a retail food market and farmers market in Southwark. It is one of the largest and oldest food markets in London, with a market on the site dating back to at least the 12th century. A farmers market is a physical retail marketplace intended to sell foods directly by farmers to consumers. Farmers markets may be indoors or outdoors and typically consist of booths, tables or stands where farmers sell fruits, vegetables, meats, cheeses, and sometimes prepared foods and beverages.
    20180619_borough market fishmonger_0...jpg
  • Langoustines for sale at a fishmongers at Borough Market in London, England, United Kingdom. Borough Market is a retail food market and farmers market in Southwark. It is one of the largest and oldest food markets in London, with a market on the site dating back to at least the 12th century. A farmers market is a physical retail marketplace intended to sell foods directly by farmers to consumers. Farmers markets may be indoors or outdoors and typically consist of booths, tables or stands where farmers sell fruits, vegetables, meats, cheeses, and sometimes prepared foods and beverages.
    20180619_borough market fishmonger_0...jpg
  • Fishmongers at Borough Market in London, England, United Kingdom. Borough Market is a retail food market and farmers market in Southwark. It is one of the largest and oldest food markets in London, with a market on the site dating back to at least the 12th century. A farmers market is a physical retail marketplace intended to sell foods directly by farmers to consumers. Farmers markets may be indoors or outdoors and typically consist of booths, tables or stands where farmers sell fruits, vegetables, meats, cheeses, and sometimes prepared foods and beverages.
    20180619_borough market fishmonger_0...jpg
  • Fishmongers at Borough Market in London, England, United Kingdom. Borough Market is a retail food market and farmers market in Southwark. It is one of the largest and oldest food markets in London, with a market on the site dating back to at least the 12th century. A farmers market is a physical retail marketplace intended to sell foods directly by farmers to consumers. Farmers markets may be indoors or outdoors and typically consist of booths, tables or stands where farmers sell fruits, vegetables, meats, cheeses, and sometimes prepared foods and beverages.
    20180619_borough market fishmonger_0...jpg
  • Fishmongers at Borough Market in London, England, United Kingdom. Borough Market is a retail food market and farmers market in Southwark. It is one of the largest and oldest food markets in London, with a market on the site dating back to at least the 12th century. A farmers market is a physical retail marketplace intended to sell foods directly by farmers to consumers. Farmers markets may be indoors or outdoors and typically consist of booths, tables or stands where farmers sell fruits, vegetables, meats, cheeses, and sometimes prepared foods and beverages.
    20180619_borough market fishmonger_0...jpg
  • Fishmongers at Borough Market in London, England, United Kingdom. Borough Market is a retail food market and farmers market in Southwark. It is one of the largest and oldest food markets in London, with a market on the site dating back to at least the 12th century. A farmers market is a physical retail marketplace intended to sell foods directly by farmers to consumers. Farmers markets may be indoors or outdoors and typically consist of booths, tables or stands where farmers sell fruits, vegetables, meats, cheeses, and sometimes prepared foods and beverages.
    20180619_borough market fishmonger_0...jpg
  • Nell Gifford and her horse during her act at Gifford Circus, Marlborough, UK.
    sfe_040701_0015.jpg
  • Performers during the finale at Gifford Circus, Marlborough, UK.
    sfe_040701_0012.jpg
  • A strong man poses outside Gifford Circus, Marlborough, UK.
    sfe_040701_0010.jpg
  • Two people of east Asian-descent look at Toshiba laptops displayed in a computer specialist in Tottenham Court Road - the centre for technology, gadgets and computing in central London. It is 1990 and the smaller, more portable laptop market is just taking off. The man takes notes on paper, writing prices, technical  specifications and offers for these Japanese-made items. Vying for sales with Toshiba in this particular window is Psion, Epson and Canon - all players in the early 1990s.
    toshiba_buyers-03-03-1990_1_1.jpg
  • British actor Eileen Atkins and London theatreland productions booking office posters on 15th August 2017, in London, England. She and Jonathan Pryce appear in The Height Of The Storm at the Wyndham’s Theatre.
    theatre_land-06-15-08-2018.jpg
  • London theatreland productions booking office posters on 15th August 2017, in London, England.
    theatre_land-01-15-08-2018.jpg
  • From the side of a road in south London, we see a group of naked female mannequins, standing and sitting with furniture on the forecourt of an office supplies business. A clearance sign stands partly-obscured but one’s attention is to the physiques of each model that tends to signify whichever the fashion industry has decreed is the ‘look’ of the decade – whether buxom or skinny – and shop windows are therefore occupied with the clothing shapes of the day. Some women stand in that classic fashion pose, with arms at the side and one leg in front of the other, or sitting with one leg elegantly crossed: All designed to make the clothes they wear look attractive.
    street_mannequins-21-05-1999_1_1.jpg
  • A rack of quintessentially English ‘saucy postcards’ are on display in Scarborough, the northern seaside town. Telling jokes to send back to friends and family, they using cartoon characters of buxom women, hen-pecked husbands or sexually-frustrated young men, the humour is bawdy and cheeky - the epitome of seaside holiday kitsch. The best-known saucy seaside postcards were created by Bamforths (founded 1870) and despite the decline in popularity of postcards that are overtly tacky, postcards continue to be a significant economic and cultural aspect of British seaside tourism. In the 1950s, Bamforth postcards were among the most popular of the 18 million items purchased at British resorts.
    scarborough_saucy_postcards-19-07-19...jpg
  • The circus animal trainer leads two of his elephant friends one morning after a Gerry Cottle show the night before. Riding a bicycle across a field in London, he leads one beast, its trunk holding his white stick while another follows behind. Peters is topless, wearing a wide-brimmed hat and bright blue trousers. Marcel Peters is a circus animal trainer who has worked in the ring for many years, starting with Billy Smart's Circus and working with Polar bears, tigers, lions and elephants. Gerry Cottle sold his elephants and Peters moved with them to the Spanish Circus Mundial. His real name is Marcel Peter Hodge.
    RB_126-28-09-1990.jpg
  • Lit by early sun that filters through mountain peaks to this remote village near Ulleri, in the Himalayan foothills, Nepal, we see the veranda of a tea shop that serves weary travellers trekking the Annapurna Circuit and traditional doko basket. Villages such as these partly-depend on the agriculture of rice-growing and also on the passing tourist trade. Western trekkers walk through these tiny communities on their way up the series of climbing trails of the Annapurna Conservation Sanctuary, a sometimes gruelling walk from the low hills of Pokhara to the higher altitudes of Annapurna, the (26,000 feet (8,000 metre) peak - and beyond. Tea houses are dotted along the trail offering lodging, refreshments and basic, but delicious food to the weary traveller and the landscapes are often shared with local livestock.
    nepal_travel2312-12_1997.jpg
  • Seen through the window of a generic central London restaurant, we see a family, possibly tourists, seated in full view of the street's passers-by, while ordering their dinners from a waiter. The man is standing over them, writing down a mother's orders while at the next row of seats, a man is also telling his own waiter what his dinner will be. An Open sign has been placed to attract more trade into this business, a favourite among tourists visiting Theatreland in the capital's West End. It is early evening and the background street is dark with other businesses illuminated. Other couples and customers are also sitting at tables waiting for their food to arrive and in the foreground, a young man sips a glass of Coke from a straw.
    london28-22-11-2009.jpg
  • With his body in shade and only his head in the sun, a Portuguese man stands in the street of central Lisbon to read the headlines of national and provincial newspapers which are pinned by their top right corners for passers-by to glance at or buy. Lit by early morning sun, the daily or weekly periodicals are set in a neat row for the benefit of this man and other citizens of the Portuguese capital. Ornate square tile mosaics are set in the pavement (sidewalk) in a design style that Lisbon is well-known for. In an age of mass-communications, reading one's media on paper in such a manner already seems old fashioned.
    lisbon_nrespapers03-20-1994.jpg
  • Fish and buyers in the narrow streets of the Bairro Alto district - or Upper City - the oldest of Lisbon's residential quarters. Locals inspect the catches of the day, caught in the seas off the Portuese capital and coasts. In the background are crowds of visitors in the narrow, high-sided street. Lisbon's Bairro Alto quarter is located above Baixa and developed in the 16th Century. Suffering very little damage in the earthquake of 1755, it remains the area of most character and renowned for its residential and working quarter for craftsmen and shopkeepers. At night, life takes on a different personality when bars and up until the 60s, prostitution gave the district a bad reputation in the past but nowadays tourists and the chic frequent its streets and traditional 'Fado' (classical Portuguese opera) bars.
    lisbon_market01-22-03-1994_1.jpg
  • Looking as if from a past era, two ladies examine shoes at a 1986 jumble sale in the south Wales town of Abergavenney, Monmouthshire. Both are holding right-foot shoes that might suit them at this charity event held by the local Lions club, whose volunteers help the elderly and the disadvantaged within their community. We see some of the clothing piled up on trestle tables but the ladies’ attention is just on their finds which are within their price range, having to survive on meagre pensions.
    jumble_sale01-15-06-1986_1.jpg
  • Seen from an aerial walkway, we look down on a lady airline passengers struggling to separate two trolleys in the baggage reclaim hall in the arrivals of Heathrow Airport's Terminal 5. 50-70,000 pieces of British Airways baggage a day travel through 11 miles of conveyor belts which were installed in a 5-storey underground hall beneath the 400m (a quarter of a mile) length of Terminal 5. T5 alone has the capacity to serve around 30 million passengers a year and was completed in 2008 at a cost of £4.3bn. The system was designed by an integrated team from the airport operator BAA, BA and Vanderlande Industries of the Netherlands, and handles both intra-terminal and inter-terminal luggage. From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009).
    heathrow_airport464-14-07-2009_1 1.jpg
  • Seen from an aerial walkway, we look down on a lady airline passengers struggling to separate two trolleys in the baggage reclaim hall in the arrivals of Heathrow Airport's Terminal 5. 50-70,000 pieces of British Airways baggage a day travel through 11 miles of conveyor belts which were installed in a 5-storey underground hall beneath the 400m (a quarter of a mile) length of Terminal 5. T5 alone has the capacity to serve around 30 million passengers a year and was completed in 2008 at a cost of £4.3bn. The system was designed by an integrated team from the airport operator BAA, BA and Vanderlande Industries of the Netherlands, and handles both intra-terminal and inter-terminal luggage. From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009).
    heathrow_airport464-14-07-2009_1.jpg
  • Electric Gibson guitars in Sunburst and other colours in a music shop window on London's Charing Cross Road. American guitar manufacturer have the reputation of countless musicians around the world who play quality music with a superior instrument. Labels in this window tell us that a 1959 Les Paul; a 1958 Yellow and others are priced at between £3-5000. Their precision engineering and design attracting buyers from around the world to this area of London called Tin Pan Alley - essentially located in London's Denmark Street though now being displaced because of rising lease and rent rates.
    guitars_shop02-06-03-2015_1.jpg
  • A portrait of a lady fishmonger and her shellfish in the Norfolk seaside town of Great Yarmouth. Holding up a tray of fish and shellfish, the lady proudly stands outside her kiosk in the centre of this eastern England seaside resort. A pot of shrimps, some crabs, salmon steaks and traditional kippers are shown to us. In the background are cod fillets, prawns and other smoked fish.
    fishmonger_portair-27-05-1992_1.jpg
  • A hand steadies an awkward event banner showing the fleet of modern airliners belonging to European consortium, Airbus during the bi-annual aerospace industry expo at the Farnborough airshow in southern England. From the top of the banner we see the short-haul A319 type to the bottom which has featured the long-range A340-600 version. Alongside each model's profile, we see the aircraft's statistics and performance figures. Airbus is the main competitor to the American Boeing range of modern airliners. Airbus is an aircraft manufacturing subsidiary of EADS, a European aerospace company. Based in Blagnac, France, the company produces approximately half of the world's jet airliners, employing around 63,000 people at sixteen sites in four European Union countries: France, Germany, the United Kingdom and Spain.
    farnborough06-29-07-2002_1.jpg
  • A book-lover browses titles and editions under Waterloo Bridge on the Southbank, on 18th February 2000, in London, England.
    embankment_books-18-02-2000.jpg
  • A portrait of a local butcher in the Essex seaside town of Frinton-on-Sea. Proud of his produce of fresh joints and carcasses of fresh meat, his business shows a successful and protitable financial concern in this Essex seaside town, largely inhabited by the older generation. We see in the background, hanging pork on hooks and beef joints in the display cabinet with a model of a butcher with his chopping block. A butcher is an ancient trade, whose duties may date back to the domestication of livestock, butchers formed guilds in England as far back as 1272. Today, many jurisdictions offer trade certifications for butchers. Some areas expect a three-year apprenticeship followed by the option of becoming a master butcher.
    butcher_portrait-12-06-1992_1.jpg
  • A detail of a rock and holiday souvenir seller in the Lancashire seaside town of Blackpool. Standing in his shop, we see the owner of this seaside shop on the northwest England resort where buying seaside gifts and souvenirs is ever popular by visitors and daytrippers. In 1887, sugar-boiling factory owner Ben Bullock bought some plain stick candy band had the idea of putting ‘Blackpool Rock’ through the centre of the rock. Now a major industry in the holiday season in Britain and many seaside towns have their versions with their own names running through the rock. Modern seaside rock is thicker, about 1 inch, and more solid than the original form. Its sugar content is nowadays a reason not to buy as much, the adverse effects on teeth from sugar and colouring by the confectionary industry being a main reason for its decline.
    blackpool_rock-19-07-1993_1.jpg
  • At first glance, we see an angry male holding the severed head of another man in his right hand. But this is a circus act from the Archaos troupe, a french company of oerformers who tour the world with their anarchic version of big top entertainment. With a dark background and with the apparent  murderer wearing black, it is an image of raw, homocidal thuggery: A massacre and attack on another human being. Despite it being a pretence, an act for the sake of an audience with a thirst for the macabre, it is still very disturbing.
    archaos_circus-27-09-1990_1.jpg
  • Sunglasses hanging on 2 coathangers
    _F3A9011_1.jpg
  • Fishmongers at Borough Market in London, England, United Kingdom. Borough Market is a retail food market and farmers market in Southwark. It is one of the largest and oldest food markets in London, with a market on the site dating back to at least the 12th century. A farmers market is a physical retail marketplace intended to sell foods directly by farmers to consumers. Farmers markets may be indoors or outdoors and typically consist of booths, tables or stands where farmers sell fruits, vegetables, meats, cheeses, and sometimes prepared foods and beverages.
    20180619_borough market fishmonger_0...jpg
  • A trapeze artist during her act at Gifford Circus, Marlborough, UK.
    sfe_040701_0011.jpg
  • A trapeze artist takes applause from the audience during her act in Gifford Circus, Marlborough, UK
    sfe_040701_0005.jpg
  • Tourists and London theatreland productions booking office posters, on 15th August 2017, in London, England.
    theatre_land-04-15-08-2018.jpg
  • The tower containing Big Ben amid the Gothic architecture of Britain's Houses of Parliament and jogger on the Embankment. Passing-by at speed with a slight blur, the male sportsman runs by the racks of colourful postcards showing London scenes, their prices written on makeshift marker on a white board. Beyond is Westminster Bridge that stretches of the River Thames, towards the British Houses of Parliament, with Big Ben's clock tower rising high above. It is a fine sunny day and a woman is writing more prices for tourist mementoes of another board, leaning on the river wall. The House of Commons is the lower house of the Parliament of the United Kingdom, which also comprises the Sovereign and the House of Lords (the upper house). Both Commons and Lords meet in the Palace of Westminster.
    parliament12-08-04-2010.jpg
  • Many pairs of anti-slip Acifort Wellington boots are awaiting users at the New England seafood suppliers in Chessington, London England. Made by British company Dunlop, these boots are designed as protection against the cold , insulating wearers in refrigerated workplaces such as this facility where fresh fish is processed ready for supplying UK supermarkets. Either showing their soles or standing on the floor alongside the wearers' outdoor footwear, they are coloured various shades of clean off-white or soiled cream. New England Seafood is a major supplier of fresh and frozen premium sustainable fish and seafood in the UK and one of the largest importers of fresh tuna. The Wellington boot -or wellie - was worn and popularised by Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington and fashionable among the British aristocracy in the early 19th century.
    new_england55-27-11-2007.jpg
  • High in the Nepali Himalayan foothills, travellers may be greeted by the welcoming relief of a group of mountain inns and hotels offering lodging to weary legs after many hours walking uphill in this gruelling landscape. Communities here partly-depend on the agriculture of rice-growing but also on the passing tourist trade. Western trekkers from all over the world walk through these tiny communities on their way up the series of climbing trails of the Annapurna Conservation Sanctuary circuit, a sometimes rigorous walk from the low hills of Pokhara to the higher altitudes of Annapurna, the (26,000 feet (8,000 metre) peak. To be greeted by so much choice is the most rewarding experience and the offer of hot showers is about the best reward for so much exertion.
    nepal_travel2612-12_1997.jpg
  • Fruit and buyers in the narrow streets of the Bairro Alto district - or Upper City - the oldest of Lisbon's residential quarters. A local woman across the narrow, high-sided street, yawns while an orange and apple seller looks for her next customer on the cobbled lane. <br />
Lisbon's Bairro Alto quarter is located above Baixa and developed in the 16th Century. Suffering very little damage in the earthquake of 1755, it remains the area of most character and renowned for its residential and working quarter for craftsmen and shopkeepers. At night, life takes on a different personality when bars and up until the 60s, prostitution gave the district a bad reputation in the past but nowadays tourists and the chic frequent its streets and traditional 'Fado' (classical Portuguese opera) bars.
    lisbon_market02-22-03-1994_1.jpg
  • White plaster or cement Goddess statuettes stand on sale on the forecourt of a garden art business in an Athens suberb, Marathonas Avenue - the original Marathon route of 490 BC. The mostly female figurines are in various poses but are all nudes and are in various gestures of a classical heroic style. Those in the foreground have their arms at the heads and moulded breasts and bodies to show the perfect female form while further to the back are male Gods placed on plinths and in recesses. The 29th modern Olympic circus came home to Greece in 2004 and the birthplace of athletics and the Olympic ideal, amid the woodland of ancient Olympia where for 1,100 continuous years, the ancients held their pagan festival of sport and debauchery.
    greek_olympiad011-23-10_2003_1.jpg
  • Circus acrobats perform high above auditor Ernst & Young's staff during a company Academy Day held for 3,000 of their London employees at Excel in London's Docklands England. Lit with blue light by powerful spotlights, the two girls are suspended in mid-air using hoops attached to safety ropes. They both make dramatic shapes in the air to demonstrate confidence, synchronised teamwork and co-operation between partners, the themes of this corporate day out of the office. The employees out of sight below are attending this fair where motivational pep-talks from executives, outside speakers and gurus will talk to large groups of E & Y personnel so their presence on this day away from the office is vital for the year's business ahead.
    Ernst+Young_Academy129-21-09-2007_1.jpg
  • Acrylic teeth samples displayed at Ivoclar Vivadent in Schaan, Liechtenstein who export 60 million false dentures a year worldwide. A board of dental specimens are laid out like grinning mouths at the company showroom. False teeth are Liechtenstein's leading export: Located in the municipality of Schaan, just north of the capital Vaduz, Ivoclar Vivadent is a global dental behemoth. The 60 million artificial teeth the company manufactures annually in 10,000 different shades and shapes, account for 40 per cent of all the false teeth sold in Europe and 20 per cent worldwide. With a turnover of some 600 million Swiss francs, Ivoclar has 1.3 million dentists in 120 countries using its products.
    dentures_teeth-08-02-1990_1.jpg
  • Bodyboards on sale in the north Devon coastal village of Combe Martin. Various characters from the movie industry are represented on the top surfaces, attracting the younger buyer. The bodyboard differs from a surfboard in the fact that it is much shorter and made out of foam. Bodyboarding has been around since ancient Hawaiian days, it was called "Paipo" and was made out of koa wood. The modern board consists of a foam 'core' encapsulated by a plastic bottom and a softer foam top known as the deck. The core is made up from dow/polyethylene, arcel or, more recently, polypropylene.
    body-boards1-04-August-2011_1.jpg
  • A cigarette dispenser mounted to an apartment block wall in Wedding, a north-western district of Berlin. The dirty wall and street pavement show a district in disrepair where immigration and a non-German population is high. Unlike in Britain, tobacco and cigarettes can be bought unregulated by anyone - even children - on the street. Brands such as Marlboro, Lucky Strike, Pall Mall and Cabinet can be chosen by pushing a selection button.
    berlin_cigarettes01-06-04-2013_1.jpg
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