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)
{ 24 images found }

Loading ()...

  • Six months after the fall of the Berlin Wall, the last Trabant cars go through 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.
    trabant_factory-15-06-1990_1.jpg
  • Tacky Christmas tourist trinkets with santa hat and grenadier soldier thems on sale outside a discount shop in New Oxford Street in central London.
    tacky_christmas04-21-12-2015.jpg
  • Tacky Christmas tourist trinkets on sale outside a discount shop in New Oxford Street in central London.
    tacky_christmas01-21-12-2015.jpg
  • In the week before Chrsitmas, santa hats on sale outside a tourist trinket shop in London's West End. Each one can be bought for £2.99 or 4 for ten pounds. The colours of a Union jack flag is seen in the background.
    santa_hats01-17-12-2014.jpg
  • In the local community Stratford Centre shopping mall in East London, we see official Olympic merchandising on sale during the London 2012 Olympics, the 30th Olympiad. A few hundred metres from the giant Westfield plaza complex that acts as a gateway to the main Olympic arenas, this market outdates the newer development where similar souvenirs can be bought for up to twice the prices offered by the stall holder. Cashions are £10 (Pounds) and duvet covers (bedding) are £20.
    olympic_stratford28-06-08-2012.jpg
  • In the local community Stratford Centre shopping mall in East London, we see official Olympic merchandising on sale during the London 2012 Olympics, the 30th Olympiad. A few hundred metres from the giant Westfield plaza complex that acts as a gateway to the main Olympic arenas, this market outdates the newer development where similar souvenirs can be bought for up to twice the prices offered by the stall holder. Cashions are £10 (Pounds) and duvet covers (bedding) are £20.
    olympic_stratford29-06-08-2012.jpg
  • Strip of tourist postcards on sale as a workman passes-by carrying ladder near the Eiffel Tower, at the Trocadero, Paris.
    paris_postcards01-28-09-2005.jpg
  • African street vendors wait for coach tourists to sell postcards near the Eiffel Tower, at the Trocadero, Paris.
    paris_postcards-28-09-2005.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 .jpg
  • A street retailer adds to the display of £1 tourist trinket souvenirs at a kiosk at the end of Westminster Bridge during the Coronavirus pandemic when the tourism industry has hit hard the UK economy and associated jobs, on 16th September 2020, in London, England.
    tourism_trinkets01-16-09-2020.jpg
  • Six months after the fall of the Berlin Wall, a pair of hands cup some nuts that go towards the construction of Trabant cars at the car factory in the former East Germany (DDR) where the last Trabants 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.
    trabant_factory-15-06-1990.jpg
  • Tacky Christmas tourist trinkets with santa hat and grenadier soldier thems on sale outside a discount shop in New Oxford Street in central London.
    tacky_christmas05-21-12-2015.jpg
  • Tacky Christmas tourist trinkets on sale with a Santa theme outside a discount shop in New Oxford Street in central London.
    tacky_christmas03-21-12-2015.jpg
  • Christmas santa hats on a sunlit rack in a trinket shop on London's Oxford Street.
    christmas_hats03-16-12-2014.jpg
  • A young man rests in the front of a London branch of Topshop. Surrounded by Sale posters that hide the merchandise behind the glass, the man exhales the smoke from a cigarette with his bags alongside on the floor. The large red lettering attracts the attention of passing shoppers to this womens' fashion outfitters on Oxford Street. Topshop is a British multinational retailer which specialises in fashion clothing, shoes, make-up and accessories. It has around 440 shops across 33 countries and online operations in a number of its markets. It is part of the Arcadia Group, which is controlled by Philip Green and owns a number of other retail outlets including Burton, Dorothy Perkins and Miss Selfridge.
    sale_posters-21-10-1992.jpg
  • Mannequins wear sexy underwear on display in the window of an adult shop window in London's Old Brompton Street, Soho.
    electricity130-17-01-2008 .jpg
  • Tacky Christmas tourist trinkets on sale outside a discount shop in New Oxford Street in central London.
    tacky_christmas02-21-12-2015.jpg
  • In the local community Stratford Centre shopping mall in East London, we see official Olympic merchandising on sale during the London 2012 Olympics, the 30th Olympiad. A few hundred metres from the giant Westfield plaza complex that acts as a gateway to the main Olympic arenas, this market outdates the newer development where similar souvenirs can be bought for up to twice the prices offered by the stall holder. Cashions are £10 (Pounds) and duvet covers (bedding) are £20.
    olympic_stratford30-06-08-2012.jpg
  • In the local community Stratford Centre shopping mall in East London, we see official Olympic merchandising on sale during the London 2012 Olympics, the 30th Olympiad. A few hundred metres from the giant Westfield plaza complex that acts as a gateway to the main Olympic arenas, this market outdates the newer development where similar souvenirs can be bought for up to twice the prices offered by the stall holder. Cashions are £10 (Pounds) and duvet covers (bedding) are £20.
    olympic_stratford26-06-08-2012.jpg
  • As an early sun rises, the twin stacks of Richborough cooling Towers make silhouettes against the golden morning light. Now decommissioned, these industrial giants of the landscape are sending clouds of steam vapour into the air, in the county of Kent. Nature can be seen competing with 20th Century technology as solar energy is seen against the war power being generated. From 1962-1971 Richborough burned coal from collieries. In 1971 the station was converted to burn oil. Too costly to run plant underwent trials on an experimental fuel called Orimulsion, a cheap heavy oil and water-based emulsion produced form natural bitumen from Venezuela. Initial results or trials suggested it would make a cheap clean fuel alternative to oil but high sulphur emissions from the plant caused nearby Acid Rain and after local protest, the site has since been derelict.
    cooling_towers01-19-05-1992.jpg
  • In late afternoon winter sun, a lady emerges from deep shadow wearing a fur hat on the Kings Road in Chelsea, London, England. Foreign magazines line a rack of an outdoor newsagent and we only see the lady's head in the sunlight. There is a low colour temperature orange glow to the picture and only the lady's face wrapped in a fur hat and the magazine covers can be seen in detail. There are few highlights apart from the magazines in the sun, and more shadow area making this a dark image. The Kings Road has been famous in London since the 60s when fashion and flower power was the label most associated with being young and hip in the Swinging Sixties. It is more sober these days but families and young people tend to be wealthier, white and middle-class than other areas such as Carnaby Street which is seen as seedy and cheap.
    RB-0035.jpg
  • A new Trabant car shell is lifted by forklift from a truck at the East German auto maker VEB Sachsenring Automobilwerke Zwickau in Zwickau, Saxony.  A worker carefully manoeuvres the unfinished bodywork into a crate where other vehicles await completion on the production line. The Trabant was the most common vehicle in East Germany - Like the Beetle in the West, its Peoples' Car with a 595 cc, two-cylinder air-cooled engine. It had space for four, was compact, light and durable with its distinctive body shape constructed from Duroplast panels attached to a galvanized steel shell. It was in production without any significant changes for about 34 years, becoming a symbol for the cheap, cheerful and polluting possessions for Communist Europeans. When the Berlin Wall eventually fell, Trabants coughed and spluttered onto West German roads for the first time.
    DDR_travel03-06_1990.jpg
  • Filled with suits, jackets, trousers, and overcoats, the choices of mens' office worker clothes fill a shop front window belonging to Mr Byrite, a high-street clothes store chain in London England UK. Bargain sale prices for the items of clothing are all over the window display, offering discounts for £30, £40 or £60 and the mannequins used to wear these clothes either have bald-headed representations of men, or faceless white models wearing sun glasses. There is a sale of cheap items attracting young city men, far from traditional work attire, and more fashionable for the day.
    RB_074-16-02-1992.jpg
  • Months after the fall of the Berlin wall and the collapse of the communist GDR state (the German Democratic Republic), a Trabant is worked on at the company factory, on 15th June 1990, in Berlin, Eastern Germany. The East German auto maker VEB Sachsenring Automobilwerke was at Zwickau in Saxony. The Trabant was the most common vehicle in East Germany - Like the Beetle in the West, its Peoples' Car with a 595 cc, two-cylinder air-cooled engine. It had space for four, was compact, light and durable with its distinctive body shape constructed from Duroplast panels attached to a galvanized steel shell. It was in production without any significant changes for about 34 years, becoming a symbol for the cheap, cheerful and polluting possessions for Communist Europeans. When the Berlin Wall eventually fell, Trabants coughed and spluttered onto West German roads for the first time. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    GDR_trabant02-15-06-1990.jpg
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

Richard Baker Photography

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