Show Navigation

Search Results

Refine Search
Match all words
Match any word
Prints
Personal Use
Royalty-Free
Rights-Managed
(leave unchecked to
search all images)
{ 194 images found }

Loading ()...

  • A young boy stands up in his father's Anglia car on a summer day out in the early nineteen sixties.
    sixties_archive04-15-06-1960.jpg
  • A Ford Anglia is parked in an empty road and homegrown beds of dahlias grow in the front garden of a council house in the early 1960s.
    60s_family02-20-04-1963.jpg
  • A young boy poses proudly at the rear of the family Anglia car on an Essex estate in the early nineteen sixties.
    sixties_archive06-13-07-1964.jpg
  • A young boy sits in the family Anglia car with his older sister on an Essex estate in the early nineteen sixties.
    sixties_archive08-20-04-1963.jpg
  • German troops are ready to embark into a stationary Chinook helicopter during battle exercises in east Anglia, England. Waiting for the signal to climb aboard, they wear full battle-dress and camouflage for the English forest. Joining a joint force of British and foreign regiments, these Germans are distinctive by their helmets, still shaped much like their WW2 counterparts.
    german_troops-30-07-1996.jpg
  • A mother holds her 4 year-old son with the family Ford Anglia during summer time in the early 1960s. There are tents behind them in the distance, a summer camping site in Essex. Both doors of the car are open for this portrait, a summer's day in an era of innocence when car ownership was still to become popular among the working and middle-classes is estates like this. The colours are brillianty reproduced and was recorded on a film camera by the child's father, an amateur photographer in 1962. The picture shows us a memory of nostalgia in an era from the last century.
    60s_family13-28-08-1962.jpg
  • A young man washes the family Anglia car on an Essex estate in the early nineteen sixties.
    sixties_archive09-20-04-1963.jpg
  • A visitor pauses to read the writing on a Royal Mail postal box while walking round the East Anglia Transport Museum, Lowestoft, Suffolk, England. A Routemaster double-decker bus in a local bus company colours sits in the sunshine - well-maintained and pristine in the sunshine.
    transport_museum02-12-06-1992.jpg
  • A visitor pauses to read the writing on a Royal Mail postal box while walking round the East Anglia Transport Museum, Lowestoft, Suffolk, England. A Routemaster double-decker bus in a local bus company colours sits in the sunshine - well-maintained and pristine in the sunshine.
    transport_museum01-12-06-1992.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_broad01-01-08-2013.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.jpg
  • Riverside Ferry Inn sign and boating on the River Yare at Reedham on the Norfolk Broads.
    norfolk_reedham01-29-07-2013.jpg
  • Meat industry workers deliver pork carcasses to a local butchers, on 10th August 2020, in Aylsham, Norfolk, England.
    aylsham_butcher03-10-08-2020.jpg
  • The exterior of the Church of St. Mary the Virgin, a building funded from the wealth of the 14th century local weaving industry, on 10th August 2020, in Worstead, Norfolk, England.
    worstead_church01-10-08-2020.jpg
  • A pet dog sits on the step of a pub at 10 Lady Street, in Lavenham, Suffolk, England. By the late 15th century, the town was among the richest in the British Isles, paying more in taxation than considerably larger towns such as York and Lincoln. Several merchant families emerged, the most successful of which was the Spring family.  The wool trade was already present by the 13th century, steadily expanding as demand grew. By the 1470s Suffolk produced more cloth than any other county.
    suffolk-15-09-07-2020.jpg
  • Car and passengers boarding the chain ferry crossing the River Yare in Reedham on the Norfolk Broads.
    reedham_ferry10-01-08-2013.jpg
  • Yacht crew cleaning decks on the River Yare at Reedham on the Norfolk Broads.
    norfolk_reedham06-01-08-2013.jpg
  • Social distancing hazard tape is on historical  flagstones in the nave of St. Michael's C of E church, during the Coronavirus pandemic, on 13th August 2020, in Beccles, Suffolk, England.
    beccles04-13-08-2020.jpg
  • The memorial to the notable landscape architect Humphry repton and his wife Mary,  who were laid to rest outside the Church of St. Michael, on 10th August 2020, in Aylsham, Norfolk, England. Repton was the last great English landscape designer of the eighteenth century, often regarded as the successor to Capability Brown.
    aylsham_church06-10-08-2020.jpg
  • Medieval houses and Give Way traffic lines on the road on Water Lane, wool town, Lavenham, on 9th July 2020, in Lavenham, Suffolk, England. By the late 15th century, the town was among the richest in the British Isles, paying more in taxation than considerably larger towns such as York and Lincoln. Several merchant families emerged, the most successful of which was the Spring family. Heavy traffic is a problem now for small villages dissected by A and B-Roads throughout rural Britain. became a prosperous town based on cloth making. The wool trade was already present by the 13th century, steadily expanding as demand grew. By the 1470s Suffolk produced more cloth than any other county.
    suffolk-12-09-07-2020.jpg
  • A passer-by notices a caged pet budgie hanging outside Turkish barbers 'Golden Scissors', on Earsham Street, on 13th August 2020, in Bungay, Norfolk, England.
    bungay02-13-08-2020.jpg
  • With rods over the deck of his small yacht, a man fishes for perch on the still waters of the river Chet, on 13th August 2020, in Loddon, Norfolk, England.
    loddon03-13-08-2020.jpg
  • A detail of the medieval rood screen in the Church of St. Michael's, Aylsham which survived Puritan reformers, on 10th August 2020, in Aylsham, Norfolk, England. The rood screen was freshly gilded and painted in the early 16th Century but badly damaged by puritan reformers although sixteen painted figures can still be seen. The Church of St Michael and all Angels, Aylsham, Norfolk is a church of medieval origins that was built in the 14th century under the patronage of John of Gaunt, lord of the manor of Aylsham.
    aylsham_church09-10-08-2020.jpg
  • A meat industry worker delivers pork carcasses to a local butchers, on 10th August 2020, in Aylsham, Norfolk, England.
    aylsham_butcher06-10-08-2020.jpg
  • Morning sunshine and the churchyard of the Church of St. Mary the Virgin, a building funded from the wealth of the14th century local weaving industry, on 10th August 2020, in Worstead, Norfolk, England.
    worstead_church10-10-08-2020.jpg
  • The street sign for the Suffolk wool town of Clare in rural Suffolk, on 10th July 2020, in Clare, Suffolk, England. During the medieval period Clare became a prosperous town based on cloth making. The wool trade was already present by the 13th century, steadily expanding as demand grew. 3000 local fleeces were sold from Clare Manor alone in 1345. By the 1470s Suffolk produced more cloth than any other county.
    suffolk-32-10-07-2020.jpg
  • A For Sale sign stands outside the main door of River House, a building in the wool town of Kersey, being sold by the Savills and Winkworth estate agents (both seen on reverse sides of the placard)  that opens on to the street in on 9th July 2020, in Kersey, Suffolk, England. River House is a 15th century Elizabethan town house, on the market for £1.2m though is currently in a derelict state.  The wool trade was already present by the 13th century, steadily expanding as demand grew. By the 1470s Suffolk produced more cloth than any other county.
    suffolk-18-10-07-2020.jpg
  • A pink party dress is displayed outside a vintage clothing busness, on 14th August 2020, in Aldeburgh, Norfolk, England.
    adleburgh10-14-08-2020.jpg
  • Faces and bodies are distorted by shaped mirrors on Southwold Pier, on 14th August 2020, in Southwold, Norfolk, England.
    adleburgh03-14-08-2020.jpg
  • A passer-by notices a caged pet budgie hanging outside Turkish barbers 'Golden Scissors', on Earsham Street, on 13th August 2020, in Bungay, Norfolk, England.
    bungay05-13-08-2020.jpg
  • A sailor takes a mid-day nap on his yacht at Hickling Broad, on 11th August 2020, in Hickling, Norfolk, England.
    hickling_broad03-11-08-2020.jpg
  • A meat industry worker delivers pork carcasses to a local butchers, on 10th August 2020, in Aylsham, Norfolk, England.
    aylsham_butcher14-10-08-2020.jpg
  • Early morning milk and bread delivery left in a crate on the doorstep of a property known as 'Geoffrey the Dyer's house', in Worstead, a village whose wealth came from the 14th century weaving industry, on 10th August 2020, in Worstead, Norfolk, England.
    worstead_doorstep03-10-08-2020.jpg
  • Roadsigns outside the Church of St. Mary the Virgin, a building funded from the wealth of the14th century local weaving industry, on 10th August 2020, in Worstead, Norfolk, England.
    worstead_church02-10-08-2020.jpg
  • The window of a high street corner shop serving the local rural community, on 9th August 2020, in Stalham, Norfolk, England.
    stalham_shop01-07-08-2020.jpg
  • A detail of a window of an adult shop showing social distancing guidelines for responsible queueing customers during the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, on 11th July 2020, in Bury St. Edmunds, Suffolk,
    suffolk-50-11-07-2020.jpg
  • Medieval architecture of houses along the High Street of wool town, Lavenham, on 9th July 2020, in Lavenham, Suffolk, England. By the late 15th century, the town was among the richest in the British Isles, paying more in taxation than considerably larger towns such as York and Lincoln. Several merchant families emerged, the most successful of which was the Spring family. became a prosperous town based on cloth making. The wool trade was already present by the 13th century, steadily expanding as demand grew. By the 1470s Suffolk produced more cloth than any other county.
    suffolk-04-09-07-2020.jpg
  • Medieval architecture of houses along the High Street of wool town, Lavenham, on 9th July 2020, in Lavenham, Suffolk, England. By the late 15th century, the town was among the richest in the British Isles, paying more in taxation than considerably larger towns such as York and Lincoln. Several merchant families emerged, the most successful of which was the Spring family. became a prosperous town based on cloth making. The wool trade was already present by the 13th century, steadily expanding as demand grew. By the 1470s Suffolk produced more cloth than any other county.
    suffolk-03-09-07-2020.jpg
  • Foot passengers disembarking the small chain ferry crossing the River Yare in Reedham on the Norfolk Broads.
    reedham_ferry06-31-07-2013.jpg
  • Faces and bodies are distorted by shaped mirrors on Southwold Pier, on 14th August 2020, in Southwold, Norfolk, England.
    adleburgh04-14-08-2020.jpg
  • The names of local parish covid-19 victims hang from the branches of a tree outside St. Michael's C of E church, during the Coronavirus pandemic, on 13th August 2020, in Beccles, Suffolk, England.
    beccles03-13-08-2020.jpg
  • With rods over the deck of his small yacht, a man fishes for perch on the still waters of the river Chet, on 13th August 2020, in Loddon, Norfolk, England.
    loddon05-13-08-2020.jpg
  • Green construction netting is stretched across the nave in Holy Trinity church in Ingham, a social distancing measure during the Coronavirus pandemic whose guidelines still allow the gathering of only single worshippers, on 10th August 2020, in Ingham, Norfolk, England.
    ingham_church05-10-08-2020.jpg
  • Two boating enthusiasts row past typical Norfolk Broads architecture at Hickling Broad, on 11th August 2020, in Hickling, Norfolk, England.
    hickling_broad01-11-08-2020.jpg
  • Green construction netting is stretched across the nave in Holy Trinity church in Ingham, a social distancing measure during the Coronavirus pandemic whose guidelines still allow the gathering of only single worshippers, on 10th August 2020, in Ingham, Norfolk, England.
    ingham_church03-10-08-2020.jpg
  • Members of the local parish community attend a churchyard market, an event helping raise funds outside the Church of St. Michael, on 10th August 2020, in Aylsham, Norfolk, England.
    aylsham_church04-10-08-2020.jpg
  • Members of the local parish community attend a churchyard market, an event helping raise funds outside the Church of St. Michael, on 10th August 2020, in Aylsham, Norfolk, England.
    aylsham_church02-10-08-2020.jpg
  • A meat industry worker delivers pork carcasses to a local butchers, on 10th August 2020, in Aylsham, Norfolk, England.
    aylsham_butcher01-10-08-2020.jpg
  • Early morning milk and bread delivery left in a crate on the doorstep of a property known as 'Geoffrey the Dyer's house', in Worstead, a village whose wealth came from the 14th century weaving industry, on 10th August 2020, in Worstead, Norfolk, England.
    worstead_doorstep01-10-08-2020.jpg
  • A detail of two East Anglian local newspaper headlines during the Coronavirus pandemic,  on 9th August 2020, in Stalham, Norfolk, England.
    stalham_shop02-09-08-2020.jpg
  • A disabled elderly lady in a wheelchair is pushed  from a branch of Greggs during the Coronavirus pandemic, on 11th July 2020, in Bury St. Edmunds, Suffolk, England.
    suffolk-46-11-07-2020.jpg
  • The street sign for the Suffolk wool town of Clare in rural Suffolk, on 10th July 2020, in Clare, Suffolk, England. During the medieval period Clare became a prosperous town based on cloth making. The wool trade was already present by the 13th century, steadily expanding as demand grew. 3000 local fleeces were sold from Clare Manor alone in 1345. By the 1470s Suffolk produced more cloth than any other county.
    suffolk-27-10-07-2020.jpg
  • The street sign for the Suffolk wool town of Clare in rural Suffolk, on 10th July 2020, in Clare, Suffolk, England. During the medieval period Clare became a prosperous town based on cloth making. The wool trade was already present by the 13th century, steadily expanding as demand grew. 3000 local fleeces were sold from Clare Manor alone in 1345. By the 1470s Suffolk produced more cloth than any other county.
    suffolk-29-10-07-2020.jpg
  • The street sign for the Suffolk wool town of Clare in rural Suffolk, on 10th July 2020, in Clare, Suffolk, England. During the medieval period Clare became a prosperous town based on cloth making. The wool trade was already present by the 13th century, steadily expanding as demand grew. 3000 local fleeces were sold from Clare Manor alone in 1345. By the 1470s Suffolk produced more cloth than any other county.
    suffolk-26-10-07-2020.jpg
  • The street sign for the Suffolk wool town of Clare in rural Suffolk, on 10th July 2020, in Clare, Suffolk, England. During the medieval period Clare became a prosperous town based on cloth making. The wool trade was already present by the 13th century, steadily expanding as demand grew. 3000 local fleeces were sold from Clare Manor alone in 1345. By the 1470s Suffolk produced more cloth than any other county.
    suffolk-25-10-07-2020.jpg
  • Headstones stand in long grass of the cemetery at the Church of St. Lawrence, on 10th July 2020, in Great Waldingfield, Suffolk, England.
    suffolk-23-10-07-2020.jpg
  • A pet dog sits on the step of a pub at 10 Lady Street, in Lavenham, Suffolk, England. By the late 15th century, the town was among the richest in the British Isles, paying more in taxation than considerably larger towns such as York and Lincoln. Several merchant families emerged, the most successful of which was the Spring family.  The wool trade was already present by the 13th century, steadily expanding as demand grew. By the 1470s Suffolk produced more cloth than any other county.
    suffolk-16-09-07-2020.jpg
  • A mother of 42 years of age holds her 1 year-old son among heather in country field during summer time in the early 1960s. Standing in naturally-growing heather in afternoon sunshine, the mum and the young child are looking at plants, her polka dot dress seems to be the fashion in this picture recorded on a film camera by the child's father, an amateur photographer in 1960. The picture shows us a memory of nostalgia in an era from the last century.
    60s_family12-28-08-1960.jpg
  • The chain ferry crossing the River Yare in Reedham on the Norfolk Broads.
    reedham_ferry01-29-07-2013.jpg
  • A young boy notices a caged pet budgie hanging outside Turkish barbers 'Golden Scissors', on Earsham Street, on 13th August 2020, in Bungay, Norfolk, England.
    bungay04-13-08-2020.jpg
  • A meat industry worker delivers pork carcasses to a local butchers, on 10th August 2020, in Aylsham, Norfolk, England.
    aylsham_butcher13-10-08-2020.jpg
  • A derelict building now used for agricultural purposes but once part of the WW2-era RAF Lavenham,  a former bomber base used by the United States Air Force in the 1940s, on 10th July 2020, in Alpeton, Suffolk, England. Lavenham airfield was built during 1943. The technical site and administrative buildings were on the southern side of the airfield as were most of the dispersed temporary buildings which gave accommodation for 2,900 personnel.
    suffolk-36-10-07-2020.jpg
  • Social distancing hazard tape is on historical  flagstones in the nave of St. Michael's C of E church, during the Coronavirus pandemic, on 13th August 2020, in Beccles, Suffolk, England.
    beccles09-13-08-2020.jpg
  • Social distancing hazard tape is on historical  flagstones in the nave of St. Michael's C of E church, during the Coronavirus pandemic, on 13th August 2020, in Beccles, Suffolk, England.
    beccles07-13-08-2020.jpg
  • Holy Trinity church and the war memorial for both world wars, on 14th August 2020, in Loddon, Norfolk, England.
    loddon02-13-08-2020.jpg
  • Intricate wooden carvings on the end of pews in the Church of St. Michael's, on 10th August 2020, in Aylsham, Norfolk, England. The Church of St Michael and all Angels, Aylsham, Norfolk is a church of medieval origins that was built in the 14th century under the patronage of John of Gaunt, lord of the manor of Aylsham.
    aylsham_church08-10-08-2020.jpg
  • A meat industry worker delivers pork carcasses to a local butchers, on 10th August 2020, in Aylsham, Norfolk, England.
    aylsham_butcher12-10-08-2020.jpg
  • The street sign for the Suffolk wool town of Clare in rural Suffolk, on 10th July 2020, in Clare, Suffolk, England. During the medieval period Clare became a prosperous town based on cloth making. The wool trade was already present by the 13th century, steadily expanding as demand grew. 3000 local fleeces were sold from Clare Manor alone in 1345. By the 1470s Suffolk produced more cloth than any other county.
    suffolk-28-10-07-2020.jpg
  • Medieval houses and Give Way traffic lines on the road on Water Lane, wool town, Lavenham, on 9th July 2020, in Lavenham, Suffolk, England. By the late 15th century, the town was among the richest in the British Isles, paying more in taxation than considerably larger towns such as York and Lincoln. Several merchant families emerged, the most successful of which was the Spring family. Heavy traffic is a problem now for small villages dissected by A and B-Roads throughout rural Britain. became a prosperous town based on cloth making. The wool trade was already present by the 13th century, steadily expanding as demand grew. By the 1470s Suffolk produced more cloth than any other county.
    suffolk-10-09-07-2020.jpg
  • Medieval houses and Give Way traffic lines on the road on Water Lane, wool town, Lavenham, on 9th July 2020, in Lavenham, Suffolk, England. By the late 15th century, the town was among the richest in the British Isles, paying more in taxation than considerably larger towns such as York and Lincoln. Several merchant families emerged, the most successful of which was the Spring family. Heavy traffic is a problem now for small villages dissected by A and B-Roads throughout rural Britain. became a prosperous town based on cloth making. The wool trade was already present by the 13th century, steadily expanding as demand grew. By the 1470s Suffolk produced more cloth than any other county.
    suffolk-09-09-07-2020.jpg
  • Families admire 'Scallop', a 4 metre high steel sculpture of two interlocking scallop shells on Aldeburgh beach dedicated to Benjamin Britten. Hambling's Scallop (2003) stands on the north end of Aldeburgh beach. It is a tribute to Benjamin Britten and is pierced with the words "I hear those voices that will not be drowned" from his opera, Peter Grimes, on 14th August 2020, in Aldeburgh, Norfolk, England.
    adleburgh02-14-08-2020.jpg
  • The sundial on the spire of Holy Trinity church  as car headlights illuminate the war memorial for both world wars, on 12th August 2020, in Loddon, Norfolk, England.
    loddon01-12-08-2020.jpg
  • Fruit grows beneath arched agricultural polytunnels on Norfolk farmland, on 11th August 2020, in Norfolk, England.
    tunstead_polytunnels03-11-08-2020.jpg
  • Fruit grows beneath arched agricultural polytunnels on Norfolk farmland, on 11th August 2020, in Norfolk, England.
    tunstead_polytunnels01-11-08-2020.jpg
  • Green construction netting is stretched across the nave in Holy Trinity church in Ingham, a social distancing measure during the Coronavirus pandemic whose guidelines still allow the gathering of only single worshippers, on 10th August 2020, in Ingham, Norfolk, England.
    ingham_church06-10-08-2020.jpg
  • Roadsigns outside the Church of St. Mary the Virgin, a building funded from the wealth of the14th century local weaving industry, on 10th August 2020, in Worstead, Norfolk, England.
    worstead_church06-10-08-2020.jpg
  • The exterior of the Church of St. Mary the Virgin, a building funded from the wealth of the 14th century local weaving industry, on 10th August 2020, in Worstead, Norfolk, England.
    worstead_church12-10-08-2020.jpg
  • Headstones stand in long grass of the cemetery at the Church of St. Lawrence, on 10th July 2020, in Great Waldingfield, Suffolk, England.
    suffolk-22-10-07-2020.jpg
  • Charged board for the chain ferry crossing the River Yare in Reedham on the Norfolk Broads.
    reedham_ferry08-01-08-2013.jpg
  • Foot passengers disembarking the small chain ferry crossing the River Yare in Reedham on the Norfolk Broads.
    reedham_ferry05-31-07-2013.jpg
  • Members of the local parish community attend a churchyard market, an event helping raise funds outside the Church of St. Michael, on 10th August 2020, in Aylsham, Norfolk, England.
    aylsham_church01-10-08-2020.jpg
  • Hours after the tragic drowning of a young woman in the water on the Norfolk coast, beach visitors stare out to sea, on 9th August 2020, in Sea Palling, Norfolk, England.
    sea_palling01-09-08-2020.jpg
  • Local men killed in WW1 are commemorated on the war memorial on the Green at Hartest, on 10h July 2020, in Lavenham, Suffolk, England.
    suffolk-42-10-07-2020.jpg
  • A derelict building now used for agricultural purposes but once part of the WW2-era RAF Lavenham,  a former bomber base used by the United States Air Force in the 1940s, on 10th July 2020, in Alpeton, Suffolk, England. Lavenham airfield was built during 1943. The technical site and administrative buildings were on the southern side of the airfield as were most of the dispersed temporary buildings which gave accommodation for 2,900 personnel.
    suffolk-35-10-07-2020.jpg
  • The wash from a passing Norfolk Broads pleasure cruiser disturbs the peace for man enjoying the tranquility while fishing for perch on the still waters of the river Chet, on 13th August 2020, in Loddon, Norfolk, England.
    loddon08-13-08-2020.jpg
  • A meat industry worker delivers pork carcasses to a local butchers, on 10th August 2020, in Aylsham, Norfolk, England.
    aylsham_butcher11-10-08-2020.jpg
  • The exterior of the Church of St. Mary the Virgin, a building funded from the wealth of the 14th century local weaving industry, on 10th August 2020, in Worstead, Norfolk, England.
    worstead_church08-10-08-2020.jpg
  • An estate agent's sign outside the Bull Inn, a property in the village of wool town Cavendish, on 10th July 2020, in Lavenham, Suffolk, England. Cavendish was home to Sir John Cavendish, the ancestor of the Dukes of Devonshire, who was involved in suppressing the Peasants' Revolt. Wat Tyler, the peasants' leader, was arrested by William Walworth, the Mayor of London, for threatening King Richard II in 1381. The wool trade was already present by the 13th century, steadily expanding as demand grew. By the 1470s Suffolk produced more cloth than any other county.
    suffolk-24-10-07-2020.jpg
  • A For Sale sign stands outside the main door of River House, a building in the wool town of Kersey, being sold by the Savills and Winkworth estate agents (both seen on reverse sides of the placard)  that opens on to the street in on 9th July 2020, in Kersey, Suffolk, England. River House is a 15th century Elizabethan town house, on the market for £1.2m though is currently in a derelict state.  The wool trade was already present by the 13th century, steadily expanding as demand grew. By the 1470s Suffolk produced more cloth than any other county.
    suffolk-20-10-07-2020.jpg
  • Church seating pews are marked with ticks and crosses marking where parishioners are allowed to sit according to Coronavirus pandemic lockdown guidelines in St. Peter and St. Paul's church, on 9th July 2020, in Lavenham, Suffolk, England. At the moment, indoor religious gatherings are still banned though private prayer is allowed. Completed in 1525, the church is excessively large for the size of the village and with a tower standing 141 ft (43 m) high it lays claim to being the highest village church tower in Britain.
    suffolk-02-09-07-2020.jpg
  • Faces and bodies are distorted by shaped mirrors on Southwold Pier, on 14th August 2020, in Southwold, Norfolk, England.
    adleburgh05-14-08-2020.jpg
  • An adult and young children paddle in a canoe and an inflatable through Beccles Quay, on 13th August 2020, in Beccles, Suffolk, England.
    beccles_quay02-13-08-2020.jpg
  • Social distancing hazard tape is on historical  flagstones in the nave of St. Michael's C of E church, during the Coronavirus pandemic, on 13th August 2020, in Beccles, Suffolk, England.
    beccles05-13-08-2020.jpg
  • Fruit grows beneath arched agricultural polytunnels on Norfolk farmland, on 11th August 2020, in Norfolk, England.
    tunstead_polytunnels02-11-08-2020.jpg
  • Fruit grows beneath arched agricultural polytunnels on Norfolk farmland, on 11th August 2020, in Norfolk, England.
    tunstead_polytunnels04-11-08-2020.jpg
  • A meat industry worker delivers pork carcasses to a local butchers, on 10th August 2020, in Aylsham, Norfolk, England.
    aylsham_butcher07-10-08-2020.jpg
  • The phone kiosk and postal box still in service and good working order on the Green at Hartest, on 10th July 2020, in Hartest, Suffolk, England.
    suffolk-43-10-07-2020.jpg
  • An 'Unsuitable for Heavy Vehicles' traffic sign outside the window of a medieval house on Lady Street, Lavenham, on 9th July 2020, in Lavenham, Suffolk, England. By the late 15th century, the town was among the richest in the British Isles, paying more in taxation than considerably larger towns such as York and Lincoln. Several merchant families emerged, the most successful of which was the Spring family. Heavy traffic is a problem now for small villages dissected by A and B-Roads throughout rural Britain.  The wool trade was already present by the 13th century, steadily expanding as demand grew. By the 1470s Suffolk produced more cloth than any other county.
    suffolk-14-09-07-2020.jpg
  • An 'Unsuitable for Heavy Vehicles' traffic sign outside the window of a medieval house on Lady Street, Lavenham, on 9th July 2020, in Lavenham, Suffolk, England. By the late 15th century, the town was among the richest in the British Isles, paying more in taxation than considerably larger towns such as York and Lincoln. Several merchant families emerged, the most successful of which was the Spring family. Heavy traffic is a problem now for small villages dissected by A and B-Roads throughout rural Britain.  The wool trade was already present by the 13th century, steadily expanding as demand grew. By the 1470s Suffolk produced more cloth than any other county.
    suffolk-13-09-07-2020.jpg
  • The chain ferry crossing the River Yare in Reedham on the Norfolk Broads.
    norfolk_reedham07-01-08-2013.jpg
Next
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

Richard Baker Photography

  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • Portfolio
  • About
  • Contact
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • Blog