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  • Cancelled football pitch and empty landscape of snowbound goal posts in wintry public park in south London. During a prolonged cold spell of bad weather, snow fell continuously on the capital on Sunday, allowing families the chance to enjoy the bleak conditions, here in Ruskin Park in the borough of Lambeth.
    ruskin_park_snow01-22-01-2013.jpg
  • Cancelled football and empty landscape of snowbound goal posts in wintry public park in south London.
    ruskin_snow06-20-01-2013.jpg
  • London homes and football goal posts set in a few inches of snow during the early 2010 snows that gripped the UK.
    london_snows17-07-01-2010.jpg
  • A display by a company selling wall-mounted and post lighting in south London.
    lambeth_landscape02-03-06-2015.jpg
  • Two construction workmen manhandle a new post on Bishopsgate (Street) in the City of London, the capital's financial district.
    city_roadworks03-10-04-2014.jpg
  • New social distance bollards have widened the pavement to allow for social distancing in Threadneedle Street during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 26th October 2020, in London, England.
    city_verticals01-26-10-2020.jpg
  • New social distance bollards have widened the pavement to allow for social distancing in Threadneedle Street during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 26th October 2020, in London, England.
    city_verticals02-26-10-2020.jpg
  • New social distance bollards have widened the pavement to allow for social distancing in Threadneedle Street during the second wave of the Coronavirus pandemic, on 26th October 2020, in London, England.
    city_verticals03-26-10-2020.jpg
  • An idyllic landscape of artificial dyke waters on Halstow Marshes, near Halstow on the Kent Thames estuary marshes, potentially threatened by the future London airport.
    halstow_marshes34-02-06-2013.jpg
  • Seen through two goalposts, a lone person walks over a snowbound football pitch in a local park. During a prolonged cold spell of bad weather, snow fell continuously on the capital days before, allowing families the chance to enjoy the bleak conditions in Ruskin Park in the borough of Lambeth.
    ruskin_park_snow09-22-01-2013.jpg
  • A construction workman pushes a trolley across Bishopsgate (Street) in the City of London, the capital's financial district.
    city_roadworks02-10-04-2014.jpg
  • An idyllic landscape of artificial dyke waters on Halstow Marshes, near Halstow on the Kent Thames estuary marshes, potentially threatened by the future London airport.
    halstow_marshes33-02-06-2013.jpg
  • A man with Laurel and Hardy tattooes passes between two polished bollards at Liverpool Street station.
    tattooed_calves12-24-05-2012.jpg
  • Traffic bollards and red route stripes outside of a London bus window.
    bus_journey02-26-04-2012.jpg
  • Aerial landscape of city road markings and roundabout junction.
    aerial_junction03-16-04-2012.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_leeson50-01-09-2008.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_leeson48-01-09-2008.jpg
  • Cyclists on both road and pavement with two bicycles locked to posts on opposite sides of the road outside the Bank of England in the City of London.
    bikes_landscape09-20-03-2012.jpg
  • Londoner, red bus and two bicycles locked to posts on opposite sides of the road outside the Bank of England in the City of London.
    bikes_landscape01-20-03-2012.jpg
  • Old posts for young grapes growing on vines for white wines in Langlade, Charente-Maritime region, France.
    france_vineyard04-02-07-2014.jpg
  • Old posts for young grapes growing on vines for white wines in Langlade, Charente-Maritime region, France.
    france_vineyard03-02-07-2014.jpg
  • Two red buses and two bicycles locked to posts on opposite sides of the road outside the Bank of England in the City of London.
    bikes_landscape08-20-03-2012.jpg
  • Two red buses and two bicycles locked to posts on opposite sides of the road outside the Bank of England in the City of London.
    bikes_landscape07-20-03-2012.jpg
  • Londoners and two bicycles locked to posts on opposite sides of the road outside the Bank of England in the City of London.
    bikes_landscape06-20-03-2012.jpg
  • Londoners and two bicycles locked to posts on opposite sides of the road outside the Bank of England in the City of London.
    bikes_landscape04-20-03-2012.jpg
  • An aerial view overlooking the processing depot of Royal Mail's DIRFT logistics park in Daventry, Northamptonshire England. Commercial postage of catalogues, junk mail and brochures pass through this enormous complex where some of the UK's 82 million items pass through. Royal Mail handles some 82 million posted items a day. They have a statutory duty to provide a delivery service to 27 million addresses in the UK for letters and for parcels weighing up to 20kg. Six days a week they deliver daily to all addresses in the UK and provides a collection service from 115,000 Post Boxes, 16,000 Post Offices, businesses and organizations throughout the UK and distributed through 72 mail centres and 100 distribution centres such as DIRFT.
    DIRFT176-20-02-2007 .jpg
  • An aerial view overlooking Processing at the DIRFT logistics park in Daventry, Northamptonshire England. Commercial postage of catalogues, junk mail and brochures pass through this enormous complex where some of the UK's 82 million items pass through. Royal Mail handles some 82 million posted items a day. They have a statutory duty to provide a delivery service to 27 million addresses in the UK for letters and for parcels weighing up to 20kg. Six days a week they deliver daily to all addresses in the UK and provides a collection service from 115,000 Post Boxes, 16,000 Post Offices, businesses and organizations throughout the UK and distributed through 72 mail centres and 100 distribution centres.
    DIRFT191-20-02-2007 .jpg
  • Sorted letters are grouped in a drawer at Royal Mail's giant warehouse at the DIRFT logistics park in Daventry, Northamptonshire England. Raised from its neighbours is an Air Mail letter addressed to someone called Rodrigues and with stamps if its unknown country. Each letter faces the same direction for ease of viewing in this enormous complex where some of the UK's 82 million items pass through. Royal Mail handles some 82 million posted items a day. They have a statutory duty to provide a delivery service to 27 million addresses in the UK for letters and for parcels weighing up to 20kg. Six days a week they deliver daily to all addresses in the UK and provides a collection service from 115,000 Post Boxes, 16,000 Post Offices, businesses and organizations throughout the UK and distributed through 72 mail centres and 100 distribution centres.
    DIRFT135-20-02-2007 .jpg
  • Cross-docking sign at goods-in for departing lorries taking nationwide Royal Mail post from DIRFT logistics park in Daventry
    DIRFT156-20-02-2007 .jpg
  • Detail of the Siemens Integrated Mail Processor (SIMP) operated by the Royal Mail at their Nine Elms sorting office Vauxhall, London. Developed in the mid-1990s it is the backbone of Royal Mail's system and Nine Elms is the biggest and most modern sorting office in Britain, employing 1,000 people and handling all post coming from/to south London: 1.1 million first-class items a day, 750,000 second class. Royal Mail handles some 82 million posted items a day. They have a statutory duty to provide a delivery service to 27 million addresses in the UK for letters and for parcels weighing up to 20kg. Six days a week they deliver daily to all addresses in the UK and provides a collection service from 115,000 Post Boxes, 16,000 Post Offices, businesses and organizations throughout the UK and distributed through 72 mail centres and 100 distribution centres.
    nine_elms_35.jpg
  • The shadows of two passing locals approach the tiny Cameron-run post office hut at Kyleakin on the Isle of Skye, Scotland. We see in the foreground the freshly painted Royal Mail post box which is lit by early morning sunshine telling us that the next collection is at 2.45pm despite it being 8.50am. This branch serves the local community of this Skye town, close to the Skye Bridge and is not only a place to post letters and packages but to buy miscellaneous supplies like newspapers and food at a time when rural sub-post offices are threatened with closure by a financially-troubled Royal Mail. Small villages like this often say that the post office is the ties its folk together, acting as a nucleus for information about village life. Their closure would therefore mean that the fabric of such remote communities are in jeopardy.
    Scotland_post_office02-27-09-2007.jpg
  • Detail of the Siemens Integrated Mail Processor (SIMP) operated by the Royal Mail at their Nine Elms sorting office Vauxhall, London. Developed in the mid-1990s it is the backbone of Royal Mail's system and Nine Elms is the biggest and most modern sorting office in Britain, employing 1,000 people and handling all post coming from/to south London: 1.1 million first-class items a day, 750,000 second class. Royal Mail handles some 82 million posted items a day. They have a statutory duty to provide a delivery service to 27 million addresses in the UK for letters and for parcels weighing up to 20kg. Six days a week they deliver daily to all addresses in the UK and provides a collection service from 115,000 Post Boxes, 16,000 Post Offices, businesses and organizations throughout the UK and distributed through 72 mail centres and 100 distribution centres.
    nine_elms_35.jpg
  • A Post Office employee hauls a cart full of post onto the station platform on the Mail Rail system. The Post Office Railway, also known as Mail Rail, was a narrow-gauge driverless underground railway in London, built by the Post Office with assistance from the Underground Electric Railways Company of London, to move mail between sorting offices. Inspired by the Chicago Tunnel Company it operated from 3 December 1927 until 31 May 2003. It ran east-west from Paddington Head District Sorting Office in the west to the Eastern Office at Whitechapel in the east, a distance of 6.5 miles (10.5 km). It had eight stations, the largest of which was underneath Mount Pleasant, but by 2003 only three stations remained in use because the sorting offices above the other stations had been relocated.
    mail_rail-16-03-1993.jpg
  • A postman from the Slovenian postal service (Posta Slovenije) collects post from a post box outside the post office in rural Slovenia, on 26th June 2018, in Kamnik, Slovenia.
    slovenia-328-26-06-2018.jpg
  • A postman from the Slovenian postal service (Posta Slovenije) collects post from a post box outside the post office in rural Slovenia, on 26th June 2018, in Kamnik, Slovenia.
    slovenia-327-26-06-2018.jpg
  • Red Victorian rural post box o mounted at dry stone wall in Vale of Edale, Peak District National Park, Derbyshire.
    post_box03-02-06-2010.jpg
  • The cross on the wall of Herne Hill's United Reform Church and the direction sign post (and its shadow) of Red Post Hill.
    crosses_crucifix05-09-12-2010.jpg
  • The cross on the wall of Herne Hill's United Reform Church and the direction sign post (and its shadow) of Red Post Hill.
    crosses_crucifix04-09-12-2010.jpg
  • The cross on the wall of Herne Hill's United Reform Church and the direction sign post (and its shadow) of Red Post Hill.
    crosses_crucifix03-09-12-2010.jpg
  • The cross on the wall of Herne Hill's United Reform Church and the direction sign post (and its shadow) of Red Post Hill.
    crosses_crucifix02-09-12-2010.jpg
  • A Royal Mail postman makes a scheduled collection of post from a post box in the busy Piccadilly street in London.
    postman_collection01-12-10-2010.jpg
  • Seen from an aerial viewpoint which gives a perspective of deserted housing and empty roads, Jill Parmeter plays post woman. She is a resident of the experimental community village of Poundbury, Dorset, England. Delivering her own newsletter from door-to-door, she crosses Netherton Street and Tinten Lane to post her local news to residents and friends. The roads are empty of cars- nor is there anyone else to talk to. It is as if this community has vanished, leaving her alone. Poundbury is the visionary model village that 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.
    poundbury06-07-06_2003.jpg
  • A post box from the Slovenian postal service (Posta Slovenije outside the post office in rural Slovenia, on 26th June 2018, in Kamnik, Slovenia.
    slovenia-325-26-06-2018.jpg
  • A leaning lamp post and tree on Queensdale Road W11 in Holland Park in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea, on 13th March 2018, in London, England.
    holland_park-02-13-03-2018.jpg
  • A leaning lamp post and tree on Queensdale Road W11 in Holland Park in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea, on 13th March 2018, in London, England.
    holland_park-04-13-03-2018.jpg
  • A leaning lamp post and tree on Queensdale Road W11 in Holland Park in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea, on 13th March 2018, in London, England.
    holland_park-01-13-03-2018.jpg
  • Children playing inside the Miami post office with safety deposit boxes, on 15th May 1996, in Miami Beach, Florida, USA.
    miami_beach-15-05-1996_2.jpg
  • The shadow of a nearby lamp post and square traffic sign on the brick wall of an end terraced home, on 3rd July 2017, in Herne Hill, London, England.
    post_shadow-03-03-07-2017.jpg
  • The hands and fingers of an anonymous customer seen through a city Post Office window, behind a pension savings ad.
    post_office01-10-01-2011.jpg
  • An out of focus post with a light bulb attached, shines in the bright daylight with the Atlantic Ocean beyond. Cocoa beach is on Florida's so-called Space Coast, a resort of beaches, clubs, seafood restaurants and motels that came to life during the 1960s due to America's space program. NASA's John F. Kennedy Space Center is located approximately 15 miles away. The Atlantic Ocean is flat calm in settled weather and the horizon is clear and well-defined with a ship just visible on the right side. Focus is on the sea rather than the post and the light bulb which look like a surreal addition to the landscape. Cocoa Beach served as a playground for many of the astronauts and NASA space industry workers and contractors during the heyday of the space race. After manned space flights, the town held astronaut parades. Before there was a "Silicon Valley," Cocoa Beach and other surrounding towns were full of the best and brightest technical minds around.
    RB-0011.jpg
  • Forklift lane stencilled on the floor of Royal Mail's DIRFT logistics park in Daventry, Northamptonshire England.
    DIRFT166-20-02-2007 .jpg
  • The Victorian letter posting box outside the local shop and post office in the Northumbrian village of Blanchland, on 29th September 2017, in Blanchland, Northumberland, England. Blanchland is a village in Northumberland, England, on the County Durham boundary. The population of the Civil Parish at the 2011 census was 135. Blanchland was formed out of the medieval Blanchland Abbey property by Nathaniel Crew, 3rd Baron Crew, the Bishop of Durham, 1674-1722. It is a conservation village, largely built of stone from the remains of the 12th-century Abbey. It features picturesque houses, set against a backdrop of deep woods and open moors. Set beside the river in a wooded section of the Derwent valley, Blanchland is an attractive small village in the North Pennines Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.
    blanchland-09-29-09-2017.jpg
  • The Victorian letter posting box outside the local shop and post office in the Northumbrian village of Blanchland, on 29th September 2017, in Blanchland, Northumberland, England. Blanchland is a village in Northumberland, England, on the County Durham boundary. The population of the Civil Parish at the 2011 census was 135. Blanchland was formed out of the medieval Blanchland Abbey property by Nathaniel Crew, 3rd Baron Crew, the Bishop of Durham, 1674-1722. It is a conservation village, largely built of stone from the remains of the 12th-century Abbey. It features picturesque houses, set against a backdrop of deep woods and open moors. Set beside the river in a wooded section of the Derwent valley, Blanchland is an attractive small village in the North Pennines Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.
    blanchland-08-29-09-2017.jpg
  • The shadow of a nearby lamp post and square traffic sign on the brick wall of an end terraced home, on 3rd July 2017, in Herne Hill, London, England.
    post_shadow-02-03-07-2017.jpg
  • The shadow of a nearby lamp post and square traffic sign on the brick wall of an end terraced home, on 3rd July 2017, in Herne Hill, London, England.
    post_shadow-01-03-07-2017.jpg
  • Destination trolleys inside the Royal Mail's DIRFT logistics park in Daventry, Northamptonshire England.
    DIRFT117-20-02-2007 .jpg
  • Postal workers enjoy humour at the Royal Mail's DIRFT logistics park in Daventry, Northamptonshire England.
    DIRFT151-20-02-2007 .jpg
  • Red clock hangs from warehouse roof of cross-docking area of of Royal Mail's DIRFT logistics park in Daventry
    DIRFT168-20-02-2007 .jpg
  • On the 75th anniversary of VE Day (Victory in Europe Day, the official end of WW2) and during the UK's Coronavirus pandemic lockdown, two runners jog towards a heritage Royal Mail post box and a naval ensign flag that hangs from the garden of a corner property in Camberwell, on 8th May 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_VE_Day-02-08-05-2020.jpg
  • A Royal Mail postal worker leans into a post box to empty a batch of letters and parcels, on 20th November 2019, in the City of London, England.
    postman-04-20-11-2019.jpg
  • A Royal Mail postal worker leans into a post box to empty a batch of letters and parcels, on 20th November 2019, in the City of London, England.
    postman-01-20-11-2019.jpg
  • An autumn tree and Edwardian lamp post in Ruskin Park, on 12th November 2018, in Southwark, London, England.
    ruskin_tree-01-12-11-2018.jpg
  • The logo for the Slovenian postal service (Posta Slovenije) on the side of a vehicle  outside the main post office on Slovenska Cesta (street) in the Slovenian capital, Ljubljana, on 25th June 2018, in Ljubljana, Slovenia.
    slovenia-401-26-06-2018.jpg
  • Closed for the Saturday afternoon is the local shop and post office in the Northumbrian village of Blanchland, on 29th September 2017, in Blanchland, Northumberland, England. Blanchland is a village in Northumberland, England, on the County Durham boundary. The population of the Civil Parish at the 2011 census was 135. Blanchland was formed out of the medieval Blanchland Abbey property by Nathaniel Crew, 3rd Baron Crew, the Bishop of Durham, 1674-1722. It is a conservation village, largely built of stone from the remains of the 12th-century Abbey. It features picturesque houses, set against a backdrop of deep woods and open moors. Set beside the river in a wooded section of the Derwent valley, Blanchland is an attractive small village in the North Pennines Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.
    blanchland-26-29-09-2017.jpg
  • Pink post boxes outside a village school in Leonhard-St Leonardo, a Dolomites village in south Tyrol, Italy.
    badia_abtei25-18-07-2015.jpg
  • Leaning post and its own shadow on a brick wall in south London. In an urban landscape of angles and diagonals, we see the bent nature of vertical upright lines against the straight parallels of corugated wall sheeting, showing the random, off-true setting of the lamppost, in a side street in Southwark, south London.
    leaning_post05-13-05-2015.jpg
  • Leaning post and its own shadow on a brick wall in south London. In an urban landscape of angles and diagonals, we see the bent nature of vertical upright lines against the straight parallels of corugated wall sheeting, showing the random, off-true setting of the lamppost, in a side street in Southwark, south London.
    leaning_post04-13-05-2015.jpg
  • Girl runs past a leaning post and its own shadow on a brick wall in south London. In an urban landscape of angles and diagonals, we see the bent nature of vertical upright lines against the straight parallels of corugated wall sheeting, showing the random, off-true setting of the lamppost, in a side street in Southwark, south London.
    leaning_post02-13-05-2015.jpg
  • Leaning post and its own shadow on a brick wall in south London. In an urban landscape of angles and diagonals, we see the bent nature of vertical upright lines against the straight parallels of corugated wall sheeting, showing the random, off-true setting of the lamppost, in a side street in Southwark, south London.
    leaning_post01-12-05-2015.jpg
  • Man walks past leaning post and its own shadow on a brick wall in south London.
    bent_lamppost04-30-04-2015.jpg
  • Leaning post and its own shadow on a brick wall in south London.
    bent_lamppost03-30-04-2015.jpg
  • Leaning post and its own shadow on a brick wall in south London.
    bent_lamppost01-30-04-2015.jpg
  • Man walks past leaning post and its own shadow on a brick wall in south London.
    bent_lamppost02-30-04-2015.jpg
  • A bright red painted door and matching post box on a country cottage in the village of St Mary Hoo, near Halstow on the Kent Thames estuary marshes, potentially threatened by the future London airport.
    halstow_marshes22-02-06-2013.jpg
  • Removed graffiti and 'Post No Bills' stencil on cleaned white wall in central London street.
    no_bills01-23-10-2012.jpg
  • A Post office delivery van driver is caught  in a shaft of early spring light in a side street in the capital's financial district. This is Lombard Street, originally a piece of land granted by King Edward I to goldsmiths from the part of northern Italy known as Lombardy (larger than the modern region of Lombardy). It is a narrow and usually dark sidestreet near the Bank of England in the heart of what is called the Square Mile - the inner-part and oldest quarter of London occupied first by the Romans 2,000 years ago. Nowadays the City of London is home to banks and financial institutions but also with a resident population of under 10,000 but a daily working population of 311,000.
    city_people10-24-02-2012.jpg
  • Two male pedestrians walk past a broken post that leans over after being pushed over by a unknown vehicle.
    fallen_post01-11-03-2011.jpg
  • A Royal Mail postal worker leans into a post box to empty a batch of letters and parcels, on 20th November 2019, in the City of London, England.
    postman-05-20-11-2019.jpg
  • A Royal Mail postal worker leans into a post box to empty a batch of letters and parcels, on 20th November 2019, in the City of London, England.
    postman-03-20-11-2019.jpg
  • A Royal Mail postal worker leans into a post box to empty a batch of letters and parcels, on 20th November 2019, in the City of London, England.
    postman-02-20-11-2019.jpg
  • Closed for the Saturday afternoon is the local shop and post office in the Northumbrian village of Blanchland, on 29th September 2017, in Blanchland, Northumberland, England. Blanchland is a village in Northumberland, England, on the County Durham boundary. The population of the Civil Parish at the 2011 census was 135. Blanchland was formed out of the medieval Blanchland Abbey property by Nathaniel Crew, 3rd Baron Crew, the Bishop of Durham, 1674-1722. It is a conservation village, largely built of stone from the remains of the 12th-century Abbey. It features picturesque houses, set against a backdrop of deep woods and open moors. Set beside the river in a wooded section of the Derwent valley, Blanchland is an attractive small village in the North Pennines Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.
    blanchland-04-29-09-2017.jpg
  • A passer-by directs an articulated lorry as it squeezes past a pedestrian crossing post, making a tight turn across the pavement, on 1st August 2017, in Oxford Street, London, England.
    lorry_street-01-01-08-2017.jpg
  • With a backdrop of Dolomites mountains, workmen erect a new lap post in the city of Cortina d'Ampezzo, Veneto, Italy.
    cortina_dampezzo04-20-07-2015.jpg
  • Leaning traffic post and twisting double-yellow lines in Soho, central London.
    leaning_post01-20-05-2015.jpg
  • Leaning post and its own shadow on a brick wall in south London. In an urban landscape of angles and diagonals, we see the bent nature of vertical upright lines against the straight parallels of corugated wall sheeting, showing the random, off-true setting of the lamppost, in a side street in Southwark, south London.
    leaning_post07-13-05-2015.jpg
  • A Cycle Hire post located under the Palace of Westminster in central London.
    parliament_tfl02-06-05-2015.jpg
  • A Cycle Hire post located under the Palace of Westminster in central London.
    parliament_tfl01-06-05-2015.jpg
  • A young mother holds up her daughter to insert a letter into a post box at Heathrow Airport's Terminal 5. The girl half-climbs up the red pillar box and tries to get the postage item into the narrow slot which is an even tighter fit because of security considerations - avoiding larger and potentially dangerous packages from entering the airport's postal system. In the background we see the bustle of a departures concourse where British Airways passengers walk past after having checked-in at BA's hub terminal. At a cost of £4.3 billion, Terminal 5 has the capacity to serve around 30 million passengers a year. From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009). ..
    heathrow_airport684-17-07-2009.jpg
  • Removed graffiti and 'Post No Bills' stencil on cleaned white wall in central London street.
    no_bills02-23-10-2012.jpg
  • An urban landscape of a leaning lamp post and a vehicle's radio aerial, on 6th September, in London, England.
    bent_post-05-06-09-2018.jpg
  • An urban landscape of a leaning lamp post and a vehicle's radio aerial, on 6th September, in London, England.
    bent_post-02-06-09-2018.jpg
  • An urban landscape of a leaning lamp post and a vehicle's radio aerial, on 6th September, in London, England.
    bent_post-01-06-09-2018.jpg
  • An urban landscape of a leaning lamp post and a vehicle's radio aerial, on 6th September, in London, England.
    bent_post-04-06-09-2018.jpg
  • A van and logo from the Slovenian postal service (Posta Slovenije) outside the post office in rural Slovenia, on 26th June 2018, in Kamnik, Slovenia.
    slovenia-326-26-06-2018.jpg
  • Closed for the Saturday afternoon is the local shop and post office in the Northumbrian village of Blanchland, on 29th September 2017, in Blanchland, Northumberland, England. Blanchland is a village in Northumberland, England, on the County Durham boundary. The population of the Civil Parish at the 2011 census was 135. Blanchland was formed out of the medieval Blanchland Abbey property by Nathaniel Crew, 3rd Baron Crew, the Bishop of Durham, 1674-1722. It is a conservation village, largely built of stone from the remains of the 12th-century Abbey. It features picturesque houses, set against a backdrop of deep woods and open moors. Set beside the river in a wooded section of the Derwent valley, Blanchland is an attractive small village in the North Pennines Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.
    blanchland-05-29-09-2017.jpg
  • A shadow of a lamp post on the white outer wall of a house in East Dulwich,  on 15th March 2017, London borough of Southwark, England.
    dulwich_house-03-15-03-2017.jpg
  • Closed for winter tourist shed and post box at Lochbuie, Isle of Mull, Scotland.
    isle_of_mull21-18-11-2011.jpg
  • As the UK's Coronavirus death toll during the government's social distancing lockdown, rose by 384 to 33,998, and the R rate of infection is reported to be between 0.7 and 1.0, south Londoners queue for the Post Office on the Walworth Road in Southwark, on 15th May 2020, in London, England.
    coronavirus_lockdown-06-15-05-2020.jpg
  • A landscape at a junction of two country lanes, with the directions for West Chiltington, Thakeham, Coolham and Dial Post, on 8th September 2019, at Knepp, West Sussex, England.
    knepp_walk-02-08-09-2019.jpg
  • A landscape at a junction of two country lanes, with the directions for West Chiltington, Thakeham, Coolham and Dial Post, on 8th September 2019, at Knepp, West Sussex, England.
    knepp_walk-01-08-09-2019.jpg
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