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  • With a prominent Royal Warrant as couturier to Her Majesty the Queen, the fashion house Stewart Parvin's boutique name is seen outside 14 Motcomb Street in exclusive Belgravia, London. Royal Warrants are a mark of recognition to individuals or companies who have supplied goods or services for at least five years to HM The Queen, HRH The Duke of Edinburgh or HRH The Prince of Wales. There are around 850 Royal Warrant Holders representing a huge cross-section of trade and industry. Warrant Holders may display the relevant Royal Arms and the legend 'By Appointment' on their products, premises, stationery, vehicles and advertising but must adhere to strict guidelines for its proper use......Motcomb Street SW1
    belgravia043-26-04-2008.jpg
  • The day after the government introduced a third Coronavirus pandemic national lockdown, effectively a Tier 5 restriction, a National Health Service (NHS) ad urges patients to seek virtual appointments with GP doctors, as the capital experiences a grim post-Christmas and millions of Britons are told to stay at home, on 5th January 2021, in London, England.
    coronavirus_lockdown3_50-05-01-2021.jpg
  • The day after the government introduced a third Coronavirus pandemic national lockdown, effectively a Tier 5 restriction, a National Health Service (NHS) ad urges patients to seek virtual appointments with GP doctors, as the capital experiences a grim post-Christmas and millions of Britons are told to stay at home, on 5th January 2021, in London, England.
    coronavirus_lockdown3_49-05-01-2021.jpg
  • Made-to-measure suits are on display in the window of quality taylor Gieves & Hawkes on Savile Row during the third lockdown of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 5th February 2021, in London, England.
    gieves_and_hawkes01-05-02-2021.jpg
  • Made-to-measure suits are on display in the window of quality taylor Gieves & Hawkes on Savile Row during the third lockdown of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 5th February 2021, in London, England.
    gieves_and_hawkes02-05-02-2021.jpg
  • A royal warrant crest located at the entrance of a business in the wealthy Mayfair district of the capital, on 16th March 1997, in London, England. Royal warrants indicate that a shop or supplies the royal household with goods and services - a highly sought-after position guaranteeing quality for a business around the country.
    royal_warrant-16-03-1997.jpg
  • A royal warrant crest located at the entrance of a business in the wealthy Mayfair district of the capital, on 16th March 1997, in London, England. Royal warrants indicate that a shop or supplies the royal household with goods and services - a highly sought-after position guaranteeing quality for a business around the country.
    royal_warrant-16-03-1997_1.jpg
  • An aerial view of a VIP's car and the paperwork being read through by its passenger while being under police escort around Trafalgar Square on 5th June 2019, in London, England.
    bus_journey-06-05-06-2019.jpg
  • Rear view of a businessman waiting on seats in an office reception foyer, on 8th March 2017, London borough of Westminster, England.
    reception_man-01-08-03-2017.jpg
  • A formal military dress uniform and a civilian jacket on display in a london's taylor's premises in Sackville Street, London. Jones Chalk & Dawson have well over a century of fine tailoring tradition. The company commenced trading in 1896 when William Jones broke away from Hawkes of Savile Row (later Gieves and Hawkes), where he was head military cutter. Joseph H Dawson and Arthur Chalk also worked at Hawkes. In 1902 the young company were soon a Royal appointment from HRH the Prince of Wales, later King George V. In 1940 they were appointed by King George VI and today, Jones Chalk & Dawson continue to hold a warrant to the Belgian Royal Family.
    military_tailor1-18-10-2011.jpg
  • A formal military dress uniform and a civilian jacket on display in a london's taylor's premises in Sackville Street, London. Jones Chalk & Dawson have well over a century of fine tailoring tradition. The company commenced trading in 1896 when William Jones broke away from Hawkes of Savile Row (later Gieves and Hawkes), where he was head military cutter. Joseph H Dawson and Arthur Chalk also worked at Hawkes. In 1902 the young company were soon a Royal appointment from HRH the Prince of Wales, later King George V. In 1940 they were appointed by King George VI and today, Jones Chalk & Dawson continue to hold a warrant to the Belgian Royal Family.
    military_taylor4-29-09-2011.jpg
  • A formal military dress uniform of a guardsman on display in a london's taylor's premises in Sackville Street, London. Jones Chalk & Dawson have well over a century of fine tailoring tradition. The company commenced trading in 1896 when William Jones broke away from Hawkes of Savile Row (later Gieves and Hawkes), where he was head military cutter. Joseph H Dawson and Arthur Chalk also worked at Hawkes. In 1902 the young company were soon a Royal appointment from HRH the Prince of Wales, later King George V. In 1940 they were appointed by King George VI and today, Jones Chalk & Dawson continue to hold a warrant to the Belgian Royal Family.
    military_taylor1-29-09-2011.jpg
  • A formal portrait of English journalist David Thomas, after his appointment as the new editor of Punch Magazine, in February 1989, London England. Thomas was Young Journalist of the Year at the age of 24, became a magazine editor at 25 and was the youngest editor in the 150-year history of Punch magazine at 29. Since 1992 he has worked as a freelance author and journalist. He now writes fiction under his own name and as Tom Cain and, as of February 2015, David Churchill.
    david_thomas01-01-06-1989.jpg
  • A formal portrait of English journalist David Thomas, after his appointment as the new editor of Punch Magazine, in February 1989, London England. Thomas was Young Journalist of the Year at the age of 24, became a magazine editor at 25 and was the youngest editor in the 150-year history of Punch magazine at 29. Since 1992 he has worked as a freelance author and journalist. He now writes fiction under his own name and as Tom Cain and, as of February 2015, David Churchill.
    david_thomas02-01-06-1989.jpg
  • Businessman walking through the Broadgate corporate offices development in the City of London. Walking down steps on his way to or from an appointment or meeting, the man checks an inside pocket as he makes his way into an area of reflected sunlight with the backdrop of the Broadgate development within the ancient boundary of the capital's Square Mile, it's financial district founded by the Romans in AD43.
    broadgate_silhouettes02-04-03-2014.jpg
  • Young lady vet, Diana Stapleton with calf at Manor House Farm, Barnoldswick near Settle, North Yorkshire, England. Nursing a healthy cow in the warmth of the farmer's barn, she has just delivered twin calves and checks on other members of the herd before leaving for another appointment. Diana Stapleton belonged to the Dalehead Veterinary Group based in nearby Settle for 15 years, covering a 20-mile area of 500 remote farms though she specialised in small animals and farmwork before dying suddenly at the age of 39.
    woman_vet01-09-08-1995.jpg
  • A portrait of a young lady vet, Diana Stapleton with cows at Manor House Farm, Barnoldswick near Settle, North Yorkshire, England. Diana has just delivered twin calves and checks on other members of the herd before leaving for another appointment. Diana Stapleton belonged to the Dalehead Veterinary Group based in nearby Settle for 15 years, covering a 20-mile area of 500 remote farms though she specialised in small animals and farmwork before dying suddenly at the age of 39.
    woman_vet02-09-08-1995.jpg
  • Two businessmen in dark formal suits carry identical blue boxes along a London street. Walking away with their backs to us, the two men stride towards an appointment in the City of London. The two boxes are both held in the arms of both executives as they cross the churchyard in front of St. Paul's cathedral in the capital's financial district.
    blue_boxes4-23-09-2011.jpg
  • Two businessmen in dark formal suits carry identical blue boxes along a London street. Walking away with their backs to us, the two men stride towards an appointment in the City of London. The two boxes are both held in the arms of both executives as they cross the churchyard in front of St. Paul's cathedral in the capital's financial district.
    blue_boxes3-23-09-2011.jpg
  • Veteran BBC journalist and broadcaster, Jenni Murray enters Downing Street to interview Prime Minister Theresa May about the Suffragette movement, on 5th February 2018, in London, England. Dame Jennifer Susan "Jenni" Murray, DBE is an English journalist and broadcaster, best known for presenting BBC Radio 4's Woman's Hour. Murray was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) for services to broadcasting in 1999 and Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE) in the 2011 Birthday Honours.
    jennie_murray-01-05-02-2018.jpg
  • Businessman, Ian Maxwell (b1956) - first son of media tycoon Robert Maxwell - at a press conference on 6th November 1991 in London England. just after his father's unexplained death from a boat in the Mediterranean. Ian Maxwell was appointed chairman of Mirror Group Newspapers plc (MGN) following the death of his father on 5 November 1991. For the next month the group was the subject of speculation regarding its financial position.
    ian_maxwell-06-11-1991.jpg
  • Hopton's Alms Houses, London SE1. Hopton's Almshouses were built in 1752 by trustees appointed under the will of Charles Hopton. 26 poor persons were chosen to occupy the houses. Almsmen were allowed to marry but the original rules were framed to prevent children of the almsmen becoming chargeable to Christ Church parish. Each almsman was to receive a chaldron of coals and a payment of not less than £6 a year. The almshouses consist of a continuous range of two-storey cottages on three sides of the central lawn with trees and paved paths.
    alms_house01-18-01-2015.jpg
  • An all reduced sale of sports clothing supplier JJB.com stock, being sold by new buyer, Sports Direct shop in central London. JJB Sports has collapsed into administration, with arch-rival Sports Direct acquiring 20 stores. KPMG partners Brian Green, David Costley-Wood and Richard Fleming were appointed administrators before Sports Direct bought the JJB assets for £23.77m.
    sports_dirtect04-17-12-2012.jpg
  • An all reduced sale of sports clothing supplier JJB.com stock, being sold by new buyer, Sports Direct shop in central London. JJB Sports has collapsed into administration, with arch-rival Sports Direct acquiring 20 stores. KPMG partners Brian Green, David Costley-Wood and Richard Fleming were appointed administrators before Sports Direct bought the JJB assets for £23.77m.
    sports_dirtect03-17-12-2012.jpg
  • Old stone cross at the old church at Kilninian Church. The old church at Kilninian (built 1755, ten years after the Jacobite Rising)  but the site of worship with medieval tombstones dating from the 14th century, Kilninian, Isle of Mull, Scotland. church is one of the oldest, and until very recently, still used for worship.   Possibly standing on the site of an earlier medieval church, it first appears in the records of 1561, where it is stated that the parsonage of 'Keilnoening' had formerly belonged to the Abbot of Iona, one-third of the revenues going to the Bishop of the Isles as was customary in the diocese. Iona Abbey would have appointed a minister for the church at a stipend lower than the tithes. It is uncertain whether the church was dedicated to St Ninian, the apostle of Galloway, or to a local saint of the Early Christian period'.   It is also believed to have been once known as the Chapel of the Nine Maidens and in Gaelic  'Cill Naoi Nighean', although another possible name was The Church of the Holy Maidens - 'Cill Naoimh Nighean...(http://www.undiscoveredscotland.co.uk/mull/kilninianchurch/index.html)
    isle_of_mull283-20-11-2011.jpg
  • The old church at Kilninian (built 1755, ten years after the Jacobite Rising) but the site of worship with medieval tombstones dating from the 14th century, Kilninian, Isle of Mull, Scotland. church is one of the oldest, and until very recently, still used for worship.   Possibly standing on the site of an earlier medieval church, it first appears in the records of 1561, where it is stated that the parsonage of 'Keilnoening' had formerly belonged to the Abbot of Iona, one-third of the revenues going to the Bishop of the Isles as was customary in the diocese. Iona Abbey would have appointed a minister for the church at a stipend lower than the tithes. It is uncertain whether the church was dedicated to St Ninian, the apostle of Galloway, or to a local saint of the Early Christian period'.   It is also believed to have been once known as the Chapel of the Nine Maidens and in Gaelic  'Cill Naoi Nighean', although another possible name was The Church of the Holy Maidens - 'Cill Naoimh Nighean...(http://www.undiscoveredscotland.co.uk/mull/kilninianchurch/index.html)
    isle_of_mull279-20-11-2011.jpg
  • Portrait of caretaker Marina Carrier, at the doorway of the old church at Kilninian (built 1755, ten years after the Jacobite Rising)  but the site of worship with medieval tombstones dating from the 14th century, Kilninian, Isle of Mull, Scotland. church is one of the oldest, and until very recently, still used for worship.   Possibly standing on the site of an earlier medieval church, it first appears in the records of 1561, where it is stated that the parsonage of 'Keilnoening' had formerly belonged to the Abbot of Iona, one-third of the revenues going to the Bishop of the Isles as was customary in the diocese. Iona Abbey would have appointed a minister for the church at a stipend lower than the tithes. It is uncertain whether the church was dedicated to St Ninian, the apostle of Galloway, or to a local saint of the Early Christian period'.   It is also believed to have been once known as the Chapel of the Nine Maidens and in Gaelic  'Cill Naoi Nighean', although another possible name was The Church of the Holy Maidens - 'Cill Naoimh Nighean...(http://www.undiscoveredscotland.co.uk/mull/kilninianchurch/index.html)
    isle_of_mull282-20-11-2011.jpg
  • A businessman uses a BT public phone and makes notes with a ring-bound Filofax organiser, a pre-digital diary and appointments system used by professionals, on 16th June 1993, in Liverpool Street Station, London, England.
    city33-16-06-1994.jpg
  • An all reduced sale of sports clothing supplier JJB.com stock, being sold by new buyer, Sports Direct shop in central London. A male shopper walks past the store window with a Sports Direct bag, passing the large lettering painted onto the glass, declaring the stock sale. <br />
JJB Sports has collapsed into administration, with arch-rival Sports Direct acquiring 20 stores. KPMG partners Brian Green, David Costley-Wood and Richard Fleming were appointed administrators before Sports Direct bought the JJB assets for £23.77m.
    sports_dirtect01-17-12-2012.jpg
  • Tomb of Dominique Vivant, Baron de Denon in the Pere Lachaise cemetery, Paris. Dominique Vivant, Baron de Denon (1747-1825) was a French artist, writer, diplomat, author and archaeologist. Dominique was appointed first director of the Louvre Museum by Napoleon after the Egyptian campaign of 1798-1801.
    pere_lachaise19-19-08-2012.jpg
  • The old church at Kilninian (built 1755, ten years after the Jacobite Rising)  but the site of worship with medieval tombstones dating from the 14th century, Kilninian, Isle of Mull, Scotland. church is one of the oldest, and until very recently, still used for worship.   Possibly standing on the site of an earlier medieval church, it first appears in the records of 1561, where it is stated that the parsonage of 'Keilnoening' had formerly belonged to the Abbot of Iona, one-third of the revenues going to the Bishop of the Isles as was customary in the diocese. Iona Abbey would have appointed a minister for the church at a stipend lower than the tithes. It is uncertain whether the church was dedicated to St Ninian, the apostle of Galloway, or to a local saint of the Early Christian period'.   It is also believed to have been once known as the Chapel of the Nine Maidens and in Gaelic  'Cill Naoi Nighean', although another possible name was The Church of the Holy Maidens - 'Cill Naoimh Nighean...(http://www.undiscoveredscotland.co.uk/mull/kilninianchurch/index.html)
    isle_of_mull281-20-11-2011.jpg
  • Old stone cross at the old church at Kilninian Church. The old church at Kilninian (built 1755, ten years after the Jacobite Rising)  but the site of worship with medieval tombstones dating from the 14th century, Kilninian, Isle of Mull, Scotland. church is one of the oldest, and until very recently, still used for worship.   Possibly standing on the site of an earlier medieval church, it first appears in the records of 1561, where it is stated that the parsonage of 'Keilnoening' had formerly belonged to the Abbot of Iona, one-third of the revenues going to the Bishop of the Isles as was customary in the diocese. Iona Abbey would have appointed a minister for the church at a stipend lower than the tithes. It is uncertain whether the church was dedicated to St Ninian, the apostle of Galloway, or to a local saint of the Early Christian period'.   It is also believed to have been once known as the Chapel of the Nine Maidens and in Gaelic  'Cill Naoi Nighean', although another possible name was The Church of the Holy Maidens - 'Cill Naoimh Nighean...(http://www.undiscoveredscotland.co.uk/mull/kilninianchurch/index.html)
    isle_of_mull283-20-11-2011.jpg
  • The old church at Kilninian (built 1755, ten years after the Jacobite Rising)  but the site of worship with medieval tombstones dating from the 14th century, Kilninian, Isle of Mull, Scotland. church is one of the oldest, and until very recently, still used for worship.   Possibly standing on the site of an earlier medieval church, it first appears in the records of 1561, where it is stated that the parsonage of 'Keilnoening' had formerly belonged to the Abbot of Iona, one-third of the revenues going to the Bishop of the Isles as was customary in the diocese. Iona Abbey would have appointed a minister for the church at a stipend lower than the tithes. It is uncertain whether the church was dedicated to St Ninian, the apostle of Galloway, or to a local saint of the Early Christian period'.   It is also believed to have been once known as the Chapel of the Nine Maidens and in Gaelic  'Cill Naoi Nighean', although another possible name was The Church of the Holy Maidens - 'Cill Naoimh Nighean...(http://www.undiscoveredscotland.co.uk/mull/kilninianchurch/index.html)
    isle_of_mull275-20-11-2011.jpg
  • Newspaper cutting, yellow ribbon and Union Jack flags mark the release of Beirut hostage, the TV journalist  John McCarthy. ..John Patrick McCarthy CBE (born 27 November 1956) is a British journalist, writer and broadcaster, and one of the hostages in the Lebanon hostage crisis. He was kidnapped by Islamic Jihad terrorists in Lebanon in April 1986, and held hostage for more than five years. He was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1992. McCarthy was Britain's longest-held hostage in Lebanon, having spent over five years in captivity until his release on August 8, 1991. He shared a cell with the Irish hostage Brian Keenan, for several years.
    john_mccarthy01-11-08-1991.jpg
  • The designer and couturier Joe Casely Hayford in his Shoreditch studio in 1997. ..From the early eighties Joe styled and designed the stage clothing for many seminal bands such as The Clash and U2 whilst simultaneously working on his eponymous brand for men and women. His wide and varied career has included being the first designer to collaborate with Top Shop in 1993. from 2005-2008 Joe Casely-Hayford was Creative Director of Gieves & Hawkes, during which time he contributed to the re-positioning of the 200 year old Savile Row house. In January 2006 his new Gieves collection was launched on the runway in Paris for Men's Fashion Week, creating a precedent for a heritage Savile Row brand, and credited as a major step in bringing the illustrious company into the 21st century.  Joe Casely-Hayford was appointed an OBE - Officer of the Order of the British Empire, for services to the fashion industry, in the Queen's Birthday Honours List, published on 16 June 2007.
    casely_hayford01-10-11-1997.jpg
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