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  • A tidy pile of autumn leaves gathered together in neat mounds in Russell Square Park, on 8th October 2018, in London, England.
    park_leaves-02-08-10-2018.jpg
  • A tidy pile of autumn leaves gathered together in neat mounds in Russell Square Park, on 8th October 2018, in London, England.
    park_leaves-01-08-10-2018.jpg
  • An active middle-aged, middle-class husband and wife seen in their neat rose garden one warm summer's day
    english_family-15-06-1996.jpg
  • A tidy pile of autumn leaves gathered together in neat mounds in Russell Square Park, on 8th October 2018, in London, England.
    park_leaves-03-08-10-2018.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
  • In neat diagonal rows, young Nepali boys are crouching on the ground at the British Army's Gurkha base in Pokhara, Nepal where the Britain's Ministry of Defence recruits the best choices to become fully-trained soldiers in the UK's Gurkha Regiment. Some 60,000 young Nepalese boys aged between 17 - 22 (or 25 for those educated enough to become clerks or communications specialists) report to designated recruiting stations in the hills each November, most living from altitudes ranging from 4,000 - 12,000 feet. After initial selection, 7,000 are accepted for further tests from which 700 are sent down here to Pokhara in the shadow of the Himalayas. Only 160 of the best boys succeed in the flight to the UK. The Gurkhas training wing in Nepal has been supplying youth for the British army since the Indian Mutiny of 1857.
    RB_052-20-11-1996.jpg
  • A tray of sardines fry on an outdoor grill in the Bairro Alto district - or Upper City - the oldest of Lisbon's residential quarters. We see in detail 16 fish (sardinhas assadas in Portuguese) all lying in the sunlight on their sides in neat, parralel rows with their clouded eyes staring up towards the viewer. They still have their silvery, scaley skin and Portuguese sardines are traditionally be served with finely-chopped potatoes, considered to be the sweetest and fattest sardines in the world. In Portugal, more than 60 percent of the national sardine catch is consumed fresh: 12 pounds a person, on average, compared to only 2 pounds of the fish canned. The sardine season - when the fish are plump and juicy - lasts from the end of May to the end of October, although the fat fish can keep coming until December. 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 diferent 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.  ..
    RB-0199.jpg
  • Neat rows of head stones of British and Commonwealth soldiers killed in final stages of WW1 at Vis-en-Artois war grave cemetery
    vise_en_artois_memorial04-27-10-2008.jpg
  • Neat rows of head stones of British and Commonwealth soldiers killed in final stages of WW1 at Vis-en-Artois war grave cemetery
    vise_en_artois_memorial05-27-10-2008.jpg
  • A collection of domestic tools stored on the wall of a small farmstead garage.
    shed_tools03-04-05-2013.jpg
  • A collection of domestic tools stored on the wall of a small farmstead garage.
    shed_tools02-04-05-2013.jpg
  • A collection of domestic tools stored on the wall of a small farmstead garage.
    shed_tools01-04-05-2013.jpg
  • The WW1 Somme Courcelette cemetery. Courcelette was a major tactical objective in the Battle of Flers-Courcelette during the Somme Offensive of the First World War during which the nearby village was razed. Courcelette is 10 kilometres north-east of the town of Albert, just off the D929 road to Bapaume. The Cemetery, signposted in the village, is approximately 1 kilometre west of the village on the south side of a track (suitable for cars) from the secondary road from Courcelette to Pozieres.
    WW1_cemetery07-20-08-2003.jpg
  • Young common hornbeams growing in a Herefordshire meadow. Freshly-trimmed and shaped, the young saplings are spaced around this garden field. Like alders and hazels, hornbeams are part of the birch family, all of which produce male and female flowers in the form of catkins. In hornbeams, the catkins are normally hidden until spring. There are around 70 species of hornbeams found worldwide, mainly in East Asia, but the one most often found in the British Isles is the common hornbeam.
    hornbeam_trees07-25-08-2013.jpg
  • Damage to the bark of a young hornbeam growing in a Herefordshire meadow.
    hornbeam_trees09-25-08-2013.jpg
  • Damage to the bark of a young hornbeam growing in a Herefordshire meadow.
    hornbeam_trees03-25-08-2013.jpg
  • Piles of sawn logs and open door, ready for a winter home fire, stays dry under cover on a small holding.
    log_pile03-08-04-2012.jpg
  • Engineering struts await use on a City of London construction site.
    city_poles02-20-10-2002.jpg
  • Detail of burial plot for the Rothermere family in Holy Trinity Church, High Hurstwood, East Sussex.
    rothermere_cemetery04-27-06-2010.jpg
  • Detail of burial plot for the Rothermere family in Holy Trinity Church, High Hurstwood, East Sussex.
    rothermere_cemetery02-27-06-2010.jpg
  • A classic Aston Martin DB5 is parked outside number 46, Chester Square SW1 in London's Belgravia. Such an example of great British design sits well outside this fine house on the western end of this Square laid out in 1840 by Thomas Cubitt and attracting the personalities of the day such as Mary Shelley, Violinist Yehudi Menuhin and Prime Ministers Harold Macmillan and Margaret Thatcher. Along with its sister squares Belgrave Square and Eaton Square, Chester Square is one of the most desirable addresses in London. The 1963 Aston Martin DB5 has a top speed of 141 mph (227 km/h) and was made famous by Sean Connery as James Bond in Goldfinger.  .
    belgravia112-26-04-2008.jpg
  • With their grand character of red brick and bay windows, railings and high-celinged rooms, are the grand properties at the junction of Cadogan Gardens and Clabon Mews SW3. On the left is the crest showing Stuart House, set in this parade of fine Victorian houses. Stuart House was constructed in 1880. It is a large red-brick detached house in the 'Queen Anne' style. Cadogan Gardens SW3, is an 1890s development between the King's Road and Sloane Street.
    belgravia091-26-04-2008.jpg
  • Identical white-painted properties and ornamental fountain with central garden area in exclusive Wellington Square SW1
    belgravia099-26-04-2008.jpg
  • Single pedestrian is about to enter a property in the quiet one-way Godfrey Street off King's Road, Chelsea, SW3
    belgravia095-26-04-2008.jpg
  • Handsome red brick architecture of Victorian properties in Wilbraham Place, London's Belgravia, SW1
    belgravia092-26-04-2008.jpg
  • Ornate iron railings and their shadows outside exclusive property in Belgravia's Wilbraham Place SW1, London
    belgravia062-26-04-2008.jpg
  • Young girl and mother tying birthday party balloons to railings of their immaculate house in Belgravia, London.
    belgravia027-26-04-2008.jpg
  • Immaculate frontage with columns and pillars of the classically-designed Victorian properties in Eaton Square Belgravia, SW1
    belgravia023-26-04-2008.jpg
  • Immaculate columns and pillars frontage of the exclusive classically-designed Victorian property at 100 Eaton Square
    belgravia002-26-04-2008.jpg
  • Young children visit 2369 WW1 commonwealth burials and commemorations of war graves at Vis-en-Artois cemetery
    vise_en_artois_memorial08-27-10-2008.jpg
  • Farm land and head stones of British and Commonwealth soldiers killed in final stages of WW1 at Vis-en-Artois war grave cemetery
    vise_en_artois_memorial03-27-10-2008.jpg
  • Farm land and head stones of British and Commonwealth soldiers killed in final stages of WW1 at Vis-en-Artois war grave cemetery
    vise_en_artois_memorial02-27-10-2008.jpg
  • Farm land and head stones of British and Commonwealth soldiers killed in final stages of WW1 at Vis-en-Artois war grave cemetery
    vise_en_artois_memorial01-27-10-2008.jpg
  • Letters sorted by the Royal Mail operated Siemens Integrated Mail Processor operated at Nine Elms sorting office
    nine_elms_46.jpg
  • The tattooed hermit, Tom Leppard (1935-2016) at his secret island hideaway on the Isle of Skye, Scotland in 2007. <br />
<br />
(See main gallery caption).
    5247-RPB59-leopard_man050-27-09-2007.jpg
  • The tattooed hermit, Tom Leppard (1935-2016) at his secret island hideaway on the Isle of Skye, Scotland in 2007. <br />
<br />
(See main gallery caption).
    5247-RPB59-leopard_man060-27-09-2007.jpg
  • The tattooed hermit, Tom Leppard (1935-2016) at his secret island hideaway on the Isle of Skye, Scotland in 2007. <br />
<br />
(See main gallery caption).
    5247-RPB59-leopard_man075-27-09-2007.jpg
  • Set among idyllic fields of corn, the WW1 Somme cemetery of Redan Ridge, Serre Road, near Serre-Les-Puisieux, France - once the location of fierce  first world war battle.
    WW1_cemetery05-20-08-2003.jpg
  • WW2 Madingley American Cemetery is located in the heart of the Cambridgeshire countryside. Set in over thirty acres of beautifully maintained gardens and lawns, the cemetery contains the bodies of 3812 war dead from the world war two era. Every State of the Union is represented here. In addition inscribed on the Tablets Of The Missing are the names of over 8000 American service men who lost their lives during the war but whose bodies were never recovered. The majority of those buried here were crew members of British based aircraft, however the bodies of some of those killed in North Africa, Normandy, the North Atlantic and various other places are also buried here.
    maddingly_cemetery01-05-10-2000.jpg
  • Young common hornbeams growing in a Herefordshire meadow. Freshly-trimmed and shaped, the young saplings are spaced around this garden field. Like alders and hazels, hornbeams are part of the birch family, all of which produce male and female flowers in the form of catkins. In hornbeams, the catkins are normally hidden until spring. There are around 70 species of hornbeams found worldwide, mainly in East Asia, but the one most often found in the British Isles is the common hornbeam.
    hornbeam_trees11-25-08-2013.jpg
  • Young common hornbeams growing in a Herefordshire meadow. Freshly-trimmed and shaped, the young saplings are spaced around this garden field. Like alders and hazels, hornbeams are part of the birch family, all of which produce male and female flowers in the form of catkins. In hornbeams, the catkins are normally hidden until spring. There are around 70 species of hornbeams found worldwide, mainly in East Asia, but the one most often found in the British Isles is the common hornbeam.
    hornbeam_trees10-25-08-2013.jpg
  • Young common hornbeams growing in a Herefordshire meadow. Freshly-trimmed and shaped, the young saplings are spaced around this garden field. Like alders and hazels, hornbeams are part of the birch family, all of which produce male and female flowers in the form of catkins. In hornbeams, the catkins are normally hidden until spring. There are around 70 species of hornbeams found worldwide, mainly in East Asia, but the one most often found in the British Isles is the common hornbeam.
    hornbeam_trees04-25-08-2013.jpg
  • Young common hornbeams growing in a Herefordshire meadow. Freshly-trimmed and shaped, the young saplings are spaced around this garden field. Like alders and hazels, hornbeams are part of the birch family, all of which produce male and female flowers in the form of catkins. In hornbeams, the catkins are normally hidden until spring. There are around 70 species of hornbeams found worldwide, mainly in East Asia, but the one most often found in the British Isles is the common hornbeam.
    hornbeam_trees02-25-08-2013.jpg
  • Young common hornbeams growing in a Herefordshire meadow. Freshly-trimmed and shaped, the young saplings are spaced around this garden field. Like alders and hazels, hornbeams are part of the birch family, all of which produce male and female flowers in the form of catkins. In hornbeams, the catkins are normally hidden until spring. There are around 70 species of hornbeams found worldwide, mainly in East Asia, but the one most often found in the British Isles is the common hornbeam.
    hornbeam_trees01-25-08-2013.jpg
  • Young hornbeams growing near a wooden dovecot in a Herefordshire meadow.
    dovecot01-25-08-2013.jpg
  • Piles of sawn logs, ready for a winter home fire, stays dry under cover on a small holding.
    log_pile02-08-04-2012.jpg
  • A lone pensioner sits in one deckchair among many before an outside concert at at Kenwood House, North London. Set in leafy grounds beside Hampstead Heath, these grounds  were remodelled by Robert Adam between 1764 and 1779. English Heritage host Summer concerts here and families and music fans spend war summer evenings listening to opera, classical or series of themed performances by visiting artists and groups. Here is also the source of one of London's lost rivers, The Fleet which rises here and flows downhill into the city where it becomes part of the sewer system, emerging in the Thames at Blackfriars. Extended caption ..
    deck-chairs1-18-05-1995.jpg
  • Engineering struts await use near scaffolding on a City of London construction site.
    city_poles01-20-10-2002.jpg
  • Detail of burial plot for the Rothermere family in Holy Trinity Church, High Hurstwood, East Sussex.
    rothermere_cemetery01-27-06-2010.jpg
  • There is golden light across this narrow stretch of river, yellow flowers are on the bank and in late golden sunlight, two boys paddle upstream in their Indian canoe on the River Thames near the village of Shillingford, England. Lazily they plunge their paddles into the calm, clear blue waters of this majestic river whose source rises in deepest Gloucestershire to its industrial estuary in the English Channel 215 miles (346 km) away. But here in Oxfordshire, it is an idyllic scene of innocent childhood on calm rural waters in a beautiful and tranquil setting, on an English summer afternoon. The boys don't appear to be wearing life vests nor safety equipment but propel their craft forwards against the current with confidence.
    thames_boating01-07-18-2001.jpg
  • On a fine spring day, we see the ornate fountain, ornamental central garden and beyond, the grand terraced properties of Wellington Square, SW3 in the borough of Kensington & Chelsea, London England. The pristine houses are all identically painted white, their perfect iron railings all black as are their heavy gloss-painted doors. Wellington Square is off the King's Road Chelsea and was built around 1830: Named after the 1st Duke of Wellington (the heroic Commander-in-Chief of the British Army - most famously at Waterloo in 1815 - then a Tory politician and in 1834, temporary Prime Minister).
    belgravia097-26-04-2008.jpg
  • A young man in a dark suit walks past chatting friends who sit in spring sunshine outside their French-styled cafe Valerie on Motcomb Street.  Belgravia's Motcomb Street SW1, was first shown on a London map in 1830. by 1854 it was populated by buisinesses such as 'cowkeepers', bakers and grocers. Today there is a mix of upper-class businesses like as Patisserie Valerie, Errol Douglas the exclusive hairdressers, Stewart Parvin the royal couturier and Moyses Stevens the florist whose floral displays are seen on their window ledge and next to ornate pavement railings outside.
    belgravia047-26-04-2008.jpg
  • A young girl hangs from railings where her helium-filled  birthday balloons signal the party is soon to commence as her mother prepares indside their fine house in an exclusive and classically-designed location in Belgravia, London. The pastel-coloured balloons rise up in a breeze as the girl is self-absorbed on her big day. 103 Eaton Place faces Eaton Square, one of London's three garden squares built by Thomas Cubitt and the Grosvenor family when they developed the main part of Belgravia from 1826 until 1855. Belgravia attracts actors, politicians, ambassadors, big-budget bankers, traders and Prime Ministers like Neville Chamberlain and Stanley Baldwin at number 93.
    belgravia029-26-04-2008.jpg
  • A young girl and her mother prepare for the child's birthday party by tying balloons to the railings of their fine house in this exclusive and classically-designed location in Belgravia, London. The pastel-coloured balloons are helium-filled and rise up in a breeze as the girl smiles to herself. 103 Eaton Place faces Eaton Square, one of London's three garden squares built by Thomas Cubitt and the Grosvenor family when they developed the main part of Belgravia from 1826 until 1855. Belgravia attracts actors, politicians, ambassadors, big-budget bankers, traders and Prime Ministers like Neville Chamberlain and Stanley Baldwin at number 93.
    belgravia026-26-04-2008.jpg
  • Detail of a City of Westminster sign describing this illustrious address in a wealthy part of London - Eaton Square. A single Doric column is seen lower-right and slightly discoloured paintwork from wet English weather is on the edge of the balcony of an otherwise exclusive and classically-designed street in Belgravia. Eaton Square is one of London's three garden squares built by Thomas Cubitt and the Grosvenor family when they developed the main part of Belgravia from 1826 until 1855. Belgravia attracts actors, politicians, ambassadors, big-budget bankers, traders and Prime Ministers like Neville Chamberlain and Stanley Baldwin at number 93.
    belgravia018-26-04-2008.jpg
  • A detail of number 62 London's famous Eaton Square complete with heavy gloss-painted black door and the cream walls of this exclusive and classically-designed street in Belgravia. The numbers are also painted in black to show a prosperous address in a wealthy part of town. The brass letter box is ornate too, having been polished along with the locks. Eaton Square is one of London's three garden squares built by Thomas Cubitt and the Grosvenor family when they developed the main part of Belgravia from 1826 until 1855. Belgravia attracts actors, politicians, ambassadors, big-budget bankers, traders and Prime Ministers like Neville Chamberlain and Stanley Baldwin at number 93.
    belgravia015-26-04-2008.jpg
  • A vertical version that shows the Corinthian columns and covered doorways of exclusive and classically-designed properties in London's famous Eaton Square Belgravia, SW1, owned by Grosvenor Estate. It is a bright spring day with a blue city sky and high, thin clouds. The sun shines on the cream-coloured architectural features and some shadows from trees opposite can be seen on the lower upright pillars and an ornate lamp post. Eaton Square is one of London's three garden squares built by Thomas Cubitt and the Grosvenor family when they developed the main part of Belgravia from 1826 until 1855. Belgravia attracts actors, politicians, ambassadors, big-budget bankers, traders and Prime Ministers like Neville Chamberlain and Stanley Baldwin at number 93..
    belgravia006-26-04-2008.jpg
  • We see the head and shoulders of a man in military uniform who stands motionless beside the American flag.  he is at a graduation ceremony for United States Air Force pilots who have just passed a week-long survival courseheld at the Fairchild Air Force Base, Spokane, Washington. Its highy-trained personel conducts a survival, escape and evasion course which combat pilots and air crew need to pass before rejoining their units for real-time warfare. Conducted, in hangars and the surrounding forests, it forms part of an extensive physical and psychological assessment of young aviators on active service. In the future any one of them may be shot down behind enemy lines and need to use the lessons passed-on here to help facilitate their rescue by US forces. One pilot who passed this course in 1991, himself a Spokane-born boy, was F-16 pilot Scott O'Grady. He put his skills learned here to the test while evading Serb forces before being airlifted to safety and a hero's Presidential welcome.
    RB-0164.jpg
  • Showing the face of a man who enjoys his job, a chef reaches for a ladle hanging inside an extractor cover in the kitchens at the Vivre restaurant in Sofitel, a 605 bedroom, 27 suite and 45 meeting room accommodation and business hub Heathrow Airport's hub hotel attached to Terminal 5. The man is wearing a tall chef's hat called a toque and his uniform is pristine to reflect the hygiene standards expected of this luxury hotel and restaurant. From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009). .
    heathrow_airport1224-15-08-2009.jpg
  • Flowers laid to commemorate poet and artist WIlliam Blake (1757 ? 1827) who is buried elsewhere in Bunhill Fields cemetery, City of London
    william_blake01-07-11-2008.jpg
  • Classic Aston Martin DB5 is parked outside the exclusive number 46, Chester Square SW1 in London's Belgravia.
    belgravia113-26-04-2008.jpg
  • Immaculate and identical white-painted properties and ornamental lamp post in exclusive Wellington Square, SW1
    belgravia103-26-04-2008.jpg
  • Immaculate and identical white-painted properties and ornamental lamp post in exclusive Wellington Square, SW1
    belgravia101-26-04-2008.jpg
  • Handsome red brick architecture of Victorian properties in D'Oyley Street, London's Belgravia, SW1
    belgravia068-26-04-2008.jpg
  • Helium-filled pastel-coloured brthday party balloons tied to railings in exclusive property in Belgravia's Eaton Place, London
    belgravia031-26-04-2008.jpg
  • Helium-filled pastel-coloured brthday party balloons tied to railings in exclusive property in Belgravia's Eaton Place, London
    belgravia030-26-04-2008.jpg
  • Immaculate columns and pillars frontage of the exclusive classically-designed Victorian property at 100 Eaton Square
    belgravia001-26-04-2008.jpg
  • Letter for Welsh MP Julie Morgan at the House of Commons sorted by the Royal Mail at Nine Elms sorting office.
    nine_elms_52.jpg
  • The tattooed hermit, Tom Leppard (1935-2016) at his secret island hideaway on the Isle of Skye, Scotland in 2007. <br />
<br />
(See main gallery caption).
    5247-RPB59-leopard_man070-27-09-2007.jpg
  • The tattooed hermit, Tom Leppard (1935-2016) at his secret island hideaway on the Isle of Skye, Scotland in 2007. <br />
<br />
(See main gallery caption).
    5247-RPB59-leopard_man259-27-09-2007.jpg
  • Set among idyllic fields of corn, the WW1 Somme cemetery of Redan Ridge, Serre Road, near Serre-Les-Puisieux, France - once the location of fierce  first world war battle.
    WW1_cemetery04-20-08-2003.jpg
  • WW2 Madingley American Cemetery is located in the heart of the Cambridgeshire countryside. Set in over thirty acres of beautifully maintained gardens and lawns, the cemetery contains the bodies of 3812 war dead from the world war two era. Every State of the Union is represented here. In addition inscribed on the Tablets Of The Missing are the names of over 8000 American service men who lost their lives during the war but whose bodies were never recovered. The majority of those buried here were crew members of British based aircraft, however the bodies of some of those killed in North Africa, Normandy, the North Atlantic and various other places are also buried here.
    maddingly_cemetery02-05-10-2000.jpg
  • Piles of sawn logs, ready for a winter home fire, stays dry under cover on a small holding.
    log_pile01-08-04-2012.jpg
  • Piles of sawn logs and padlock, ready for a winter home fire, stays dry under cover on a small holding.
    log_pile05-08-04-2012.jpg
  • Engineering struts await use on a the back of a truck in a City of London construction site.
    city_scaffold1-15-07-2003.jpg
  • While seated to have dinner at home, a young boy of about 10 years of age hides his face and wipes his lips with a serviette. Demonstrating perfect manners that his parents must have instilled in him, the lad's face is hidden from the viewer as he presses the cloth to his face to obscure his identity. He is eating some sort of pudding with a spoon and a fork rests on the highly-polished table on which an ornamental posy of flowers is reflected. It is a scene of immaculate etiquette that a boy from a middle-class background might be expected to show to elders and visitors. It is an example of grooming and pedigree to take with him out into the outside world where he will be expected to be the best behaved.
    boy_table-16-03-1991.jpg
  • Piles of sawn logs, ready for a winter home fire, stays dry under cover on a small holding.
    piled_wood01-28-08-2010.jpg
  • On the corner of Draycott Place SW1 and Cardogan Gardens SW3 is Stuart House, a red brick property boasting clipped vegetation set in a brick window recess that suggests that at one time, a window was removed and filled in with more brick - its mortar and pointing is a different spacing. Strong spring sunshine is almost overhead making hard shadows on the recess and on the well-painted black gloss paintwork on the railings. Stuart House was constructed in 1880. It is a large red-brick detached house in the 'Queen Anne' style. Cadogan Gardens SW3, is an 1890s development between the King's Road and Sloane Street.
    belgravia087-26-04-2008.jpg
  • 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
  • In soft mid-morning spring sunshine, we see rising up from street-level the 5-storey houses with Doric columns in London's famous Eaton Square. Bathed in mid-morning spring sunshine, shadows from nearby trees are cast over the cream-coloured pillars of these exclusive and classically-designed properties in Belgravia. Shrubs and plants can be seen growing on the terraced balconies and all the painted surfaces are pristine. Eaton Square is one of London's three garden squares built by Thomas Cubitt and the Grosvenor family when they developed the main part of Belgravia from 1826 until 1855. Belgravia attracts actors, politicians, ambassadors, big-budget bankers, traders and Prime Ministers like Neville Chamberlain and Stanley Baldwin at number 93.
    belgravia038-26-04-2008.jpg
  • In a compressed perspective are the Doric pillars of London's famous Eaton Square. Bathed in mid-morning spring sunshine, shadows from nearby trees are cast over the cream-coloured pillars, some of which have the numbers of these exclusive and classically-designed properties in Belgravia. Shrubs and plants can be seen growing on the terraced balconies and  all the painted surfaces are pristine. Eaton Square is one of London's three garden squares built by Thomas Cubitt and the Grosvenor family when they developed the main part of Belgravia from 1826 until 1855. Belgravia attracts actors, politicians, ambassadors, big-budget bankers, traders and Prime Ministers like Neville Chamberlain and Stanley Baldwin at number 93.
    belgravia020-26-04-2008.jpg
  • Immaculate railings and heavy gloss-painted doorway of flat number 62a in exclusive Eaton Square, Belgravia.
    belgravia111-26-04-2008.jpg
  • Immaculate railings and heavy gloss-painted doorway of flat number 62a in exclusive Eaton Square, Belgravia.
    belgravia110-26-04-2008.jpg
  • Handsome red brick architecture of Victorian properties in Wilbraham Place, London's Belgravia, SW1
    belgravia093-26-04-2008.jpg
  • Window cleaner stands on ledge of handsome red brick Victorian properties in D'Oyley Street, London's Belgravia, SW1
    belgravia071-26-04-2008.jpg
  • Ornate iron railings and their shadows outside exclusive property in Belgravia's Wilbraham Place SW1, London
    belgravia060-26-04-2008.jpg
  • Resident arrives home under immaculate Doric columns of the classic Victorian properties in Eaton Square Belgravia, SW1
    belgravia021-26-04-2008.jpg
  • Immaculate frontage with columns and pillars of the classically-designed Victorian properties in Eaton Square Belgravia, SW1
    belgravia010-26-04-2008.jpg
  • Immaculate frontage with columns and pillars of the classically-designed Victorian properties in Eaton Square Belgravia, SW1
    belgravia008-26-04-2008.jpg
  • Immaculate columns and pillars frontage of the exclusive classically-designed Victorian property at 100 Eaton Square
    belgravia004-26-04-2008.jpg
  • Tidy stacks of timber with shipping serial number sprayed on their ends, ready for transporting and exporting.
    timber_export01-16-02-1998.jpg
  • Piles of trimmed raw timner logs awaiting shipment from a timber yard near Eureka, California.
    logging_industry01-25-10-1992.jpg
  • Emma and Martin are a young professional couple living in the experimental community village of Poundbury, Dorset, England. Sitting in their landscaped rear garden the married couple have their portrait taken against a high concrete wall that serves as their property's back boundary. The roofs of neighbouring homes appear over this partition and young tree saplings are fastened to a stake. Poundbury is the visionary model village that the Charles, Prince of Wales sought to develop in 1993 as a successful and pioneering town near Dorchester, built on land owned by his own Duchy of Cornwall, challenging otherwise poor post-war trends in town planning and to some extent following the New Urbanism concept from the US except that the design influences are European.
    poundbury02-07-06_2003.jpg
  • Seen from the air at dawn, dozens of F-4 Phantom fighters from the Cold War-era are laid out in grids across the arid desert at Davis-Monthan Air Forbe Base near Tucson Arizona. These retired aircraft whose air frames are too old for flight are being stored then recycled, their aluminium worth more than their sum total at this repository for old military fighter and bomber aircraft. They sit in neat rows in low light, their shadowy wings are blue in colour but their fuselage are stripped of markings, being taped up against the dust. This is a scene of once-great flying machines relegated to sad scrap, long-after the Soviet Union's own demise when western armies fought a war of propaganda. .
    davis_monthan01-15-12-2007 .jpg
  • Name badges await owners at a corporate rally day, held for 3,000 UK staff at Excel, Docklands.
    Ernst+Young_Academy96-21-09-2007.jpg
  • Able-bodied sailor shaves in his Junior Rating head (toilets)  aboard HMS Vigilant, a Vanguard class nuclear submarine
    5105-RPB59-faslane074-26-09-2007.jpg
  • Visitors inspect the row of childrens' graves in the churchyard of St James, Cooling, Kent. Charles Dickens wrote about these graves in the opening of his famous novel Great Expectations. Dickens lived nearby in Higham and referred to this row of children's tombstones now inevitably referred to as Pip's graves. Dickens pictures them as '....five little stone lozenges each about a foot and a half long which were arranged in a neat row ... and were sacred to the memory of five little brothers of mine....' In fact the Cooling graves belong to the children of two families, aged between 1 month and about a year and a half, who died in the late 18th and 19th centuries.
    cooling_church01-02-06-2013.jpg
  • Looking down from a high vantage point, we see boy pupils seated as they gather in front of the Headmaster during morning assembly at the City of London School for boys in central London. Individual faces in neat rows stretch into the distance as we look past the Headmaster who is addressing, facing his students. Some seem serious, a few are looking bored while one boy can be seen coughing into his hand and another looking away with a smirk.  We can see a diverse range of ethnic backgrounds, skin colours and hairstyles. The City of London School (CLS) is a boys' public school on the banks of the River Thames. It traces its origins to a bequest of land by John Carpenter, town clerk of London in 1442. The City of London has a resident population of under 10,000 but a daily working population of 311,000. The City of London is a geographically-small City within Greater London, England. The City as it is known, is the historic core of London from which, along with Westminster, the modern conurbation grew. The City's boundaries have remained constant since the Middle Ages but  it is now only a tiny part of Greater London. The City of London is a major financial centre, often referred to as just the City or as the Square Mile, as it is approximately one square mile (2.6 km) in area. London Bridge's history stretches back to the first crossing over Roman Londinium, close to this site and subsequent wooden and stone bridges have helped modern London become a financial success.
    RB-0128.jpg
  • Visitors inspect the row of childrens' graves in the churchyard of St James, Cooling, Kent. Charles Dickens wrote about these graves in the opening of his famous novel Great Expectations. Dickens lived nearby in Higham and referred to this row of children's tombstones now inevitably referred to as Pip's graves. Dickens pictures them as '....five little stone lozenges each about a foot and a half long which were arranged in a neat row ... and were sacred to the memory of five little brothers of mine....' In fact the Cooling graves belong to the children of two families, aged between 1 month and about a year and a half, who died in the late 18th and 19th centuries.
    cooling_church02-02-06-2013.jpg
  • Visitors inspect the row of childrens' graves in the churchyard of St James, Cooling, Kent. Charles Dickens wrote about these graves in the opening of his famous novel Great Expectations. Dickens lived nearby in Higham and referred to this row of children's tombstones now inevitably referred to as Pip's graves. Dickens pictures them as '....five little stone lozenges each about a foot and a half long which were arranged in a neat row ... and were sacred to the memory of five little brothers of mine....' In fact the Cooling graves belong to the children of two families, aged between 1 month and about a year and a half, who died in the late 18th and 19th centuries.
    cooling_church04-02-06-2013.jpg
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