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)
{ 57 images found }

Loading ()...

  • Three businessmen gather for an informal meeting, outside a bar in central Milton Keynes, UK. Each with a pint of bitter or lager, the three associates sit outside a bar in the town centre at lunchtime, half-way through the working day. One takes a sip from his pint glass and the others refer to paperwork, the subject of their time together.
    90s_businessmen-18-05-1994.jpg
  • Two businessmen of Asian descent have stopped at a bar in the City of London  and are seated by the window in Cannon Street, near St Paul's Cathedral, England. They both have a similar skin tones and are equally smart in dark suits and ties. The male on the left cradles a pint of beer while other's drink is a half-pint of either lager or perhaps apple juice. They both look successful and confident about their friendship or business dealings as they share a joke or swap stories about their lives. They wear sun glasses against the late, strong sunshine but the background has gone dark because the sun has illuminated only their faces and chests. It is a picture of confidence, success and humour.
    city_london02-15-12-2007 .jpg
  • As heatwave temperatures climb to record levels - the hottest day of the year so far, a city worker holds an almost-finished pint of Guinness behind his back in the City of London, on 25th July 2019, in London, England.
    guinness_glass-02-25-07-2019.jpg
  • Lunchtime drinker enjoys a pint at a pub in Leadenhall Market in the capital's financial district (aka The Square Mile), on 23rd April, City of London, England.
    st_georges_day-10-23-04-2018.jpg
  • Lunchtime drinker enjoys a pint at a pub in Leadenhall Market in the capital's financial district (aka The Square Mile), on 23rd April, City of London, England.
    st_georges_day-08-23-04-2018.jpg
  • A lunchtime drinker enjoys a pint at a pub in Leadenhall Market in the capital's financial district (aka The Square Mile), on 23rd April, City of London, England. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    st_georges_day-07-23-04-2018.jpg
  • A cricket fan enjoys a pint and a day out during the test match between England and New Zealand on 21st August 1999, at the Oval ground, south London, England.
    cricket_people-21-08-1999_4.jpg
  • A lunchtime drinker enjoys a pint at a pub in Leadenhall Market in the capital's financial district (aka The Square Mile), on 23rd April, City of London, England. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    st_georges_day-09-23-04-2018.jpg
  • We see three friends close-up enjoying a festive party at Hamiltons pub in the City of London only a week before Christmas. It is a busy evening in the public house which is located near Liverpool Street mainline Station and they are in a humerous spirit just having fired off party streamers that have stuck to their clothes and faces. Two are wearing red and white santa claus hats but are stil in their work clothes. One is about to drink some of his pint of beer from a long, straight glass. The three look comical because of the streamers draped over their bodies and they are laughing and giggling at a joke that one has cracked. In the background a man is looking quizzically at the decorations.  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-0134.jpg
  • In the shadow of 1 Canada Square, the iconic Canary Wharf tower in London's Docklands stands as an icon for Thatcherite Britain when the good times, prosperity and economic upturns seemed unshakeable. Four work colleagues stand under a hot lunchtime sun during a summer heatwave. In their shirtsleeves the men each hold pints of refreshing lager, all having removed their dark jackets to enjoy the company of a flirtatious female who appears to be flirting with an older male companion. The sky is blue and the five are care-free to any future economic uncertainty.
    canary_wharf_drinkers07-18-1991.jpg
  • A businessman of Asian descent has stopped at a bar in the City of London and is seated by the window in a bar.
    drinking_asian01-09-11-1997.jpg
  • A man reads a copy of the free Evening Standard  newspaper while enjoying after noon sunshine and a quiet beer outside the Wellington pub in Waterloo, on 1st April, 2019, in London England.
    city_people-03-01-04-2019.jpg
  • Members of the Deptford Jack in the Green dance from pub to pub to Greenwich, London to mark the start of spring. In the 16th and 17th centuries in England, people would make garlands of flowers and leaves for the May Day celebration. After becoming a source of competition between works Guilds. Participants wear traditional green faces and forest foliage, at tradition from the 17th Century custom of milkmaids going out on May Day with the utensils of their trade decorated with garlands and piled into a pyramid which they carried on their heads. Amongst modern "folkies" and neo-pagans the Jack in the Green has become identified with the mysterious Green Man depicted in mediaeval church carvings and is widely felt to be an embodiment of natural fertility, a spirit of the primeval greenwood and a trickster.
    jack-ofthe_green06-01-05-2013.jpg
  • England World Cup football fans watch their team's opening match on TV in Soho.
    england_fans01-12-06-2010.jpg
  • Nick Leeson is known as the former Rogue Trader whose financial market risk-taking caused the biggest financial scandal of the 20th century when he brought about the collapse of his employer, Barings Bank (personal bank to HM The Queen) in 1995. Leeson's role and subsequent jailing is one of the most notorious episodes in debacles in modern financial history. Leeson is now CEO of Galway United Football Club (http://www.galwayunitedfc.ie/) whose home ground is at Terryland Park, founded in 1024 and with a capacity of 6,000. Galway are presently (Oct 2008) bottom of the Irish Premier Division but Leeson is still busy giving motivational speeches to companies around the world. Accompanying text is available from Peter Culshaw, peterculshaw@ukonline.co.uk.
    nick_leeson25-01-09-2008.jpg
  • Evening drinkers in the traditionally Victorian Salisbury pub on St Martin's Lane in the West End's Theatreland.
    london_time30-03-09-2008.jpg
  • Evening drinkers in the traditionally Victorian Salisbury pub on St Martin's Lane in the West End's Theatreland.
    london_time28-03-09-2008.jpg
  • Nick Leeson is known as the former Rogue Trader whose financial market risk-taking caused the biggest financial scandal of the 20th century when he brought about the collapse of his employer, Barings Bank (personal bank to HM The Queen) in 1995. Leeson's role and subsequent jailing is one of the most notorious episodes in debacles in modern financial history. Leeson is now CEO of Galway United Football Club (http://www.galwayunitedfc.ie/) whose home ground is at Terryland Park, founded in 1024 and with a capacity of 6,000. Galway are presently (Oct 2008) bottom of the Irish Premier Division but Leeson is still busy giving motivational speeches to companies around the world. Accompanying text is available from Peter Culshaw, peterculshaw@ukonline.co.uk.
    nick_leeson29-01-09-2008.jpg
  • Nick Leeson is known as the former Rogue Trader whose financial market risk-taking caused the biggest financial scandal of the 20th century when he brought about the collapse of his employer, Barings Bank (personal bank to HM The Queen) in 1995. Leeson's role and subsequent jailing is one of the most notorious episodes in debacles in modern financial history. Leeson is now CEO of Galway United Football Club (http://www.galwayunitedfc.ie/) whose home ground is at Terryland Park, founded in 1024 and with a capacity of 6,000. Galway are presently (Oct 2008) bottom of the Irish Premier Division but Leeson is still busy giving motivational speeches to companies around the world. Accompanying text is available from Peter Culshaw, peterculshaw@ukonline.co.uk.
    nick_leeson25-01-09-2008.jpg
  • Lunchtime drinkers wearing red in Leadenhall Market on St George's Day, when 'Englishmen' celebrate their patron saint.
    leadenhall_St_george04-23-04-2013.jpg
  • Evening drinkers in the traditionally Victorian Salisbury pub on St Martin's Lane in the West End's Theatreland.
    london_time34-03-09-2008.jpg
  • Nick Leeson is known as the former Rogue Trader whose financial market risk-taking caused the biggest financial scandal of the 20th century when he brought about the collapse of his employer, Barings Bank (personal bank to HM The Queen) in 1995. Leeson's role and subsequent jailing is one of the most notorious episodes in debacles in modern financial history. Leeson is now CEO of Galway United Football Club (http://www.galwayunitedfc.ie/) whose home ground is at Terryland Park, founded in 1024 and with a capacity of 6,000. Galway are presently (Oct 2008) bottom of the Irish Premier Division but Leeson is still busy giving motivational speeches to companies around the world. Accompanying text is available from Peter Culshaw, peterculshaw@ukonline.co.uk.
    nick_leeson30-01-09-2008.jpg
  • Nick Leeson is known as the former Rogue Trader whose financial market risk-taking caused the biggest financial scandal of the 20th century when he brought about the collapse of his employer, Barings Bank (personal bank to HM The Queen) in 1995. Leeson's role and subsequent jailing is one of the most notorious episodes in debacles in modern financial history. Leeson is now CEO of Galway United Football Club (http://www.galwayunitedfc.ie/) whose home ground is at Terryland Park, founded in 1024 and with a capacity of 6,000. Galway are presently (Oct 2008) bottom of the Irish Premier Division but Leeson is still busy giving motivational speeches to companies around the world. Accompanying text is available from Peter Culshaw, peterculshaw@ukonline.co.uk.
    nick_leeson24-01-09-2008.jpg
  • Plastic lobster and net at the bar of The Ship and Lobster, an 1832 Dickensian pub reflecting the shellfish trade on the Thames
    river_business252-10-09-2007.jpg
  • A businessman reads a 1992 edition of the Daily Express whose headline announces that Prime Minister John Major is fighting the Pound Crisis, on a bench in the City of London (aka The Square Mile), the capital's financial centre, on 18th September 1992, in London, England. Black Wednesday occurred in the United Kingdom on 16 September 1992, when John Major's Conservative government was forced to withdraw the pound sterling from the European Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM) after it was unable to keep the pound above its agreed lower limit in the ERM. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    pound_crisis02-18-09-1992.jpg
  • Evening drinkers in the traditionally Victorian Salisbury pub on St Martin's Lane in the West End's Theatreland.
    london_time33-03-09-2008.jpg
  • Evening drinkers in the traditionally Victorian Salisbury pub on St Martin's Lane in the West End's Theatreland.
    london_time32-03-09-2008.jpg
  • Evening drinkers in the traditionally Victorian Salisbury pub on St Martin's Lane in the West End's Theatreland.
    london_time31-03-09-2008.jpg
  • Nick Leeson is known as the former Rogue Trader whose financial market risk-taking caused the biggest financial scandal of the 20th century when he brought about the collapse of his employer, Barings Bank (personal bank to HM The Queen) in 1995. Leeson's role and subsequent jailing is one of the most notorious episodes in debacles in modern financial history. Leeson is now CEO of Galway United Football Club (http://www.galwayunitedfc.ie/) whose home ground is at Terryland Park, founded in 1024 and with a capacity of 6,000. Galway are presently (Oct 2008) bottom of the Irish Premier Division but Leeson is still busy giving motivational speeches to companies around the world. Accompanying text is available from Peter Culshaw, peterculshaw@ukonline.co.uk.
    nick_leeson33-01-09-2008.jpg
  • With the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown rules being eased, pubs have now re-opened and social distanced drinkers enjoy pints at the indoor market in Greenwich, on 5th July 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_Greenwich-04-05-07-2020.jpg
  • Two young 1990s city workers drink pints of beer outside a pub in the City of London (aka The Square Mile), the capital's financial centre, on 20th May 1993, in London, England. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    city_drinks-20-05-1993.jpg
  • Still in the era of being able to smoke inside public places, an elderly gentleman extinguishes his match by waving it in the air to blow out the flame, exhaling and listening to a fellow-drinker in a Newport pub in south Wales. Clouds of smoke can be seen as they waft against the back light that filters through the windows of this smoky bar in the town centre. Pints of bitter are on the table in front of them and ash trays with used butts. The scene is of an industrial town's pub for working men where language is sharp and there is talk of realities of hard lives.
    pub_smokers-25-01-1986.jpg
  • A sign outside a bar wants customers to return and help support their business in Covent Garden, on 20th August 2020, in London, England
    coronavirus_pub01-20-08-2020.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_doorstep02-10-08-2020.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
  • England World Cup football fans watch their team's opening match versus USA on TV outside West End pub.
    england_fans17-12-06-2010.jpg
  • England World Cup football fans watch their team's opening match versus USA on TV outside West End pub.
    england_fans13-12-06-2010.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
  • England World Cup football fans watch their team's opening match versus USA on TV outside West End pub.
    england_fans14-12-06-2010.jpg
  • England World Cup football fans watch their team's opening match versus USA on TV outside West End pub.
    england_fans09-12-06-2010.jpg
  • England World Cup football fans watch their team's opening match versus USA on TV outside West End pub.
    england_fans07-12-06-2010.jpg
  • England World Cup football fans watch their team's opening match versus USA on TV outside West End pub.
    england_fans05-12-06-2010.jpg
  • England World Cup football fans watch their team's opening match versus USA on TV outside West End pub.
    england_fans04-12-06-2010.jpg
  • A butch Ladies darts player returns from bar with two pint glasses full of lager beer during England Open tournament
    anastasia_dobromyslova23-12-04-2008.jpg
  • A walker admires the view across the escarpment of Tennyson Downs on the Isle-of-Wight. Looking over his shoulder into the distance, the walker is alone on his solo pursuit along some of Britain's most beautiful coastlines, here on the south coast. The rolling downland stretches westwards - its white chalk cliffs famous for symbolising England's southern limits. Tennyson Down is a hill at the west end of the Isle of Wight just south of Totland. Tennyson Down is a grassy, whale-backed ridge of chalk which rises to 482 ft/147m above sea level. Tennyson Down is named after the poet Lord Tennyson who lived at nearby Farringford House for nearly 40 years. The poet used to walk on the down almost every day, saying that the air was worth 'sixpence a pint'.
    coastal_walker-18-06-1989.jpg
  • Young businessmen drink and chat outside a City of London pub during a warm lunchtime in Broadgate. With pint glasses lined up on the wall, the suits talk business informally in spring sunshine.
    city_lunchtime06-20-05-1994.jpg
  • Two young businessmen stand outside a City of London pub with pint glasses on the window ledge, ignoring a warning sign telling drinkers that it's illegal to do so outside, a bylaw of the 1990s era.
    city_lunchtime05-20-05-1993.jpg
  • A large, manly woman sips a pint of lager during a darts tournament where she competes in an England Open tournament at the Bunn Leisure Holiday Park in Selsey, near Chichester on the south coast of England. Holding three darts with a Union Jack flags on the 'flights', her glass covers her face but we see her rings and bracelet and her ample belly after a life of beer and cigarettes in pubs like this. A great deal of alcohol (mostly lager, but also Coke) is consumed during darts tournaments although smoking in public places has now been banned in the UK, including pubs and bars. This audience seemed to consist largely of very large lesbian women from working families which seems to suggest that the pub (and alcohol) is still the place where women are attracted to the game of darts. ..
    anastasia_dobromyslova21-12-04-2008 ...jpg
  • Darts belonging to an English lady player lay on a table with Coke glasses and a pint of lager beer during English tournament
    anastasia_dobromyslova19-12-04-2008.jpg
  • A large, manly woman sips a pint of lager during a darts tournament where she competes in an England Open tournament.
    anastasia_dobromyslova05-12-04-2008.jpg
  • London pub window.Looking through an ornately traditional English pub window, an unidentified drinker reaches for their pint of beer, as seen through the front frosted window of a tradtional pub in Drury Lane, in London's West End..From the 'Windows' series.
    Daily scenes in London3 RBA.jpg
  • Growing above older Victorian architecture is a new tower block that rises above a Victorian office block in the City of London. The fast-rising project is 20 Fenchurch Street, a skyscraper under construction on Fenchurch Street in London. It has been nicknamed the Walkie-Talkie and the Pint because of its bulbous top.[1] Upon completion in summer 2014 the building will be 160 m (525 ft) tall, with 36 storeys. Costing over £200 million, it is designed by architect Rafael Viñoly.
    city_architecture26-04-03-2013.jpg
  • A sleeping Brit holidaymaker lies on the pavement outside the Exmoor Bar in the Butlins holiday camp at Minehead, Devon. A lady also sleeps with head propped up on an elbow with empty pint glasses on the bench. Butlins and other camp businesses went into decline when the masses preferred Spanish vacations but have since been revived as travel costs have again soared and holidays at home are once again popular.
    burlins_holiday02-16-08-1986.jpg
  • Holding drained pint beer glasses that symbolises an economic recession, City of London office workers gather to drink at lunchtime while dressed in red ties and white shirts, on the 23rd April, St George's Day, England's national day. In recent years, more English flags have become more prevalent in a resurgence of national pride and more citizens have come to work dressed with a red and white theme such as ties and shirts, hats or shoes. Anything for a little fun in such gloomy times. This anonymous trio have all agreed to dress identically and enjoy an early warm spell of good weather to show-off their dress sense and patriotism.
    st_georges_day19-23-04-2009.jpg
  • Holding empty pint glasses that symbolises an empty economic recession, City of London office workers gather to drink at lunchtime while dressed in red ties and white shirts, on the 23rd April, St George's Day, England's national day.
    st_georges_day18-23-04-2009.jpg
  • With the UK death toll reaching 34,813, with a further 541 victims in the last 24hrs, the government's pandemic lockdown has eased to another stage and drinkers keep their social distances while enjoying pints from an unusually open pub in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 1st June 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_city-07-01-06-2020.jpg
  • With the UK death toll reaching 34,813, with a further 541 victims in the last 24hrs, the government's pandemic lockdown has eased to another stage and drinkers keep their social distances while enjoying pints from an unusually open pub in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 1st June 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_city-06-01-06-2020.jpg
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

Richard Baker Photography

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