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)
{ 104 images found }

Loading ()...

  • Old and unused public telephones in a narrow street in the San Marco district of Venice, Italy.
    venice_104-23-07-2015.jpg
  • Three teenage girls obsessed with social media, apps and messaging, in Trafalgar Square, London.
    phones_girls06-13-04-2015.jpg
  • Women use smartphones outside a corporate office entrance with city reflections in glass.
    city_people12-15-04-2014.jpg
  • Three teenage girls obsessed with social media, apps and messaging, in Trafalgar Square, London.
    phones_girls07-13-04-2015.jpg
  • Three teenage girls obsessed with social media, apps and messaging, in Trafalgar Square, London.
    phones_girls01-13-04-2015.jpg
  • In front of a fire station, visitors use smartphones to record the new One World Trade Center opposite the 9/11 Memorial in New York, killed at the locations of terrorist attacks on September 11th 2001. The National September 11 Memorial is a tribute of remembrance and honor to the nearly 3,000 people killed in the terror attacks of September 11, 2001 at the World Trade Center site, near Shanksville, Pa., and at the Pentagon, as well as the six people killed in the World Trade Center bombing in February 1993.
    ny_fire_station03-25-05-2014.jpg
  • Londoners on smartphone calls walk past a CCTV camera and a construction hoarding - a night time panorama of the Thames south bank, featuring the HQ of the intelligence service (MI6) across the river in Vauxhall.
    river_hoarding11-10-04-2014.jpg
  • A woman texts a friend in front of a red phone kiosk advertising Natwest's online banking for students.
    phone_ad02-24-09-2013.jpg
  • Euros changing hands for bric-a-brac and old possessions, sold at a giant market in Mauerpark - an open space on the site of the old Berlin wall, the former border between Communist East and West Berlin during the Cold War.
    berlin_mauerpark_market03-07-04-2013.jpg
  • Three teenage girls obsessed with social media, apps and messaging, in Trafalgar Square, London.
    phones_girls05-13-04-2015.jpg
  • Young City businessmen in matching clothing use smartphones in warm sunshine outside an office building.
    city_people07-13-08-2014.jpg
  • In front of a fire station, visitors use smartphones to record the new One World Trade Center opposite the 9/11 Memorial in New York, killed at the locations of terrorist attacks on September 11th 2001. The National September 11 Memorial is a tribute of remembrance and honor to the nearly 3,000 people killed in the terror attacks of September 11, 2001 at the World Trade Center site, near Shanksville, Pa., and at the Pentagon, as well as the six people killed in the World Trade Center bombing in February 1993.
    ny_fire_station02-25-05-2014.jpg
  • In front of a fire station, visitors use smartphones to record the new One World Trade Center opposite the 9/11 Memorial in New York, killed at the locations of terrorist attacks on September 11th 2001. The National September 11 Memorial is a tribute of remembrance and honor to the nearly 3,000 people killed in the terror attacks of September 11, 2001 at the World Trade Center site, near Shanksville, Pa., and at the Pentagon, as well as the six people killed in the World Trade Center bombing in February 1993.
    ny_fire_station01-25-05-2014.jpg
  • Two men using smartphones in a City of London street.
    phoning_men01-08-01-2014.jpg
  • Architectural detail inside a lower-ground control bunker at the former nuclear weapons-era airfield occupied by US Air force personnel during the Cold War and now vacant, awaiting re-landscaping and returning to common parkland for the public to use.
    greenham_common12-19-03-2003.jpg
  • Secretariat offices for the staff to Erich Mielke, an exhibit in 'Haus 1' the ministerial headquarters of the Stasi secret police in Communist East Germany, the GDR. Built in 1960, the complex now known as the Stasi Museum. Before the fall of the Wall, it was a 22-hectare complex of espionage whose centrepiece is the office and working quarters of the former Minister of State Security, Mielke who considered their role as the 'shield and sword of the party', conducting one of the world's most efficient spying operations against its political dissenters during its 40-year old socialist history. Between 1950 and 1989, the Stasi employed a total of 274,000 people in an effort to root out the class enemy. During Hitler's Third Reich, the Gestapo had one agent for every 2,000 citizens whereas the Stasi had approximately an spy for every 6.5. Here at the Stasi HQ alone 15,000 were employed plus the many regional stations. German media called East Germany 'the most perfected surveillance state of all time' - administered from this complex of offices.
    berlin_stasi_museum13-07-04-2013.jpg
  • Hazard tape stretched across the glass of an old telephone kiosk on Tottenham Court Road, on 3rd August 2017, in London, England.
    closed_phonebox-01-03-08-2017.jpg
  • Hazard tape stretched across the glass of an old telephone kiosk on Tottenham Court Road, on 3rd August 2017, in London, England.
    closed_phonebox-03-03-08-2017.jpg
  • A traditional red telephone box is seen on Denmark Hill, South London covered in fresh snow from overnight snowfall. Pedestrians walk past next to Ruskin Park, SE24.  These K-series kiosks were designed in 1936 by the renowned designer Giles Gilbert Scott. With the increasing use of mobile phones the static phone boxes are still used in remote areas of the UK where mobile service is still patchy and in major towns and cities, their presence is becoming rarer. In rural regions however, the British red phone box is still a delight to see and use.
    london_snow54-02-02_2009.jpg
  • Hazard tape stretched across the glass of an old telephone kiosk on Tottenham Court Road, on 3rd August 2017, in London, England.
    closed_phonebox-04-03-08-2017.jpg
  • A traditional red telephone box is seen on Denmark Hill, South London covered in fresh snow from overnight snowfall. Pedestrians walk past next to Ruskin Park, SE24.  These K-series kiosks were designed in 1936 by the renowned designer Giles Gilbert Scott. With the increasing use of mobile phones the static phone boxes are still used in remote areas of the UK where mobile service is still patchy and in major towns and cities, their presence is becoming rarer. In rural regions however, the British red phone box is still a delight to see and use.
    london_snow54-02-02_2009.jpg
  • Seen from a position on Southwark Bridge, we look westwards to see an office worker communicating on the telephone while referring to some paperwork. His computer monitor is on the desk next to him and beyond on the south bank, the evening sky is going purple and another office tower block's lights are on and the water of the River Thames is coloured blue. We see the office as a box, a work place where people are often separated from others by walls and partitions, creating an isolating work environment.
    RB-0040.jpg
  • An old public telephone kiosk in the central Slovenian rural town of Kamnik, on 25th June 2018, in Kamnik, Slovenia.
    slovenia-321-25-06-2018.jpg
  • A Hungarian man stands in an open phone booth to make a call using a landline in a Budapest street. The word Telefon is overhead and this cold-war era technology is in use in 1990. According to Thomas Edison, "Tivadar Puskas was the first person to suggest the idea of a telephone exchange". Puskás's idea finally became a reality in 1877 in Boston. It was then that the Hungarian word "hallom" "I hear you" was used for the first time in a telephone conversation when, on hearing the voice of the person at the other end of the line, Puskás shouted "hallom". This cannot be confirmed by any original documents, however it has passed into Hungarian modern folklore. Hallom was shortened to Hello.
    hungary_payphone-13-06-1990.jpg
  • City of London branch of the Bank of China with a red telephone kiosk.
    chinese_bank01-28-09-2012.jpg
  • On a foggy Spring morning at RAF Scampton, in Lincolnshire, a yellow MoD airfield telephone stands alone in the mist. Scampton is the headquarters of the elite 'Red Arrows', Britain's prestigious Royal Air Force aerobatic team who largely have the sole use of its air space. The ageing equipment is a push-button type and its colour matches the painted stripes on the damp, concreted ground. The gloomy mist is obscuring buildings and hangars in the background and flying has been cancelled so an eerie stillness has settled on the normally busy facility that would normally host up to six red Arrows sorties (flight) a winter's day. Communications with remote areas of the aerodrome is often necessary to alert the air traffic control tower. Only qualified personnel are to use this system, just as drivers must have undertaken an MoD vehicle course.  .
    Red_Arrows399_RBA.jpg
  • Having packed nearly all their possessions into a removal company's truck, a family have left this terraced house apart from a telephone that sits on the carpet in the middle of the carpet, on a ground floor home in Herne Hill, South London England UK. The family have taken the precaution of using a professional removal company, rather than trying to move themselves,  and we see a yellow storage van parked outside in the street ready to drive  the house's contents to the new property. This family home is now empty awaiting its new occupants who will soon arrive with their own items.
    RB_130-28-09-1999.jpg
  • A young Chinese boy on a school trip places his hand on an exhibit belonging to the British communications company, Cable & Wireless at the Hong Kong Telecom Tower in Central Hong Kong. The smartly-dressed lad dressed in his school uniform is seen against a graduated blue background and is placing his hand on a sensor to activate an interactive demonstration. His face glows with the red light from the programme and his hands is being read by the orange light of the sensor. Since 1938 Cable & Wireless became responsible for the fixed wireless services of Hong Kong and connected their external telephone services for the national network. The services operate on one of the most highly advanced fibre optic networks in the world. Cable & Wireless provides  domestic and international telecommunications services in Hong Kong through the operating companies of its subsidiary, Hong Kong Telecom.
    RB-0178.jpg
  • A Maldivian crewman uses a mobile phone after a day's tuna fishing aboard a dhoni fishing boat in a remote area of Indian Ocean
    maldives338-14-11-2007.jpg
  • A lady wearing a red dress with black polka dots locks her bike near a red public telephone kiosk.
    red_cyclist01-25-04-2013.jpg
  • Taking telephone orders near rocket painting at the Délice restaurant in the old quarter of Kourou, French Guiana..
    esa_guiana25016-08-2007.jpg
  • A detail of a Northumberland emergency (and non-emergency) phone, outside a rural police station, on 25th September 2017, in Rothbury, Northumberland, England.
    rothbury-01-25-09-2017.jpg
  • An employee clears broken glass from the lower pane of a public phone box in a central London street.
    phone_box02-27-02-2012.jpg
  • A classic, K-series red British Telecom (BT) pay phone box that is still in use sits surrounded by undergrowth near the harbour at Newport, Pembrokeshire, Wales. Amid a mass of green foliage, the freshly-painted red kiosk stands as an iconic piece of architecture that has graced Britain's towns and villages for 70-odd years. These K-series kiosks were largely designed in 1936 by the renowned designer Giles Gilbert Scott. With the increasing use of mobile phones the static phone boxes are still used in remote areas of the UK where mobile service is still patchy and in major towns and cities, their presence is becoming rarer. In rural regions however, the British red phone box is still a delight to see and use.
    wales_pembrokeshire21-03-08-2007.jpg
  • Looking down from a high viewpoint, prospective auction bidders take notes from their catalogues of old red British Telecom (BT) pay phone boxes which are lined up on display in their hundreds before the actual sale starts. The 'lots' are squeezed together along pathways allowing customers to thoroughly inspect their potential purchases' details. This is a wide-angle picture taken on the slant with the distant boxes curling around to the left. One man in blue who has opened the stiff-opening door, cranes his neck to look up into the ceiling of these solid cast-iron frames. The K-series kiosks were largely designed in 1936 by the iconic designer Giles Gilbert Scott.
    RB-0059.jpg
  • While her pet spaniel plays outside, a 1990s resident of a Budapest housing estate makes a call in a phone kiosk,<br />
on 13th June 1990, in Budapest, Hungary. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images)
    budapest_housing-13-06-1990.jpg
  • A nineties sweet shop keeper makes a phone call and works out a price using a store calculator, in a shop called The Sugar Boy, on 18th May 2000, in Canterbury, Kent, England.
    shop_keeper01-18-05-2000.jpg
  • Women use smartphones outside a corporate office entrance with city reflections in glass.
    city_people11-15-04-2014.jpg
  • A man plugged in to earphones walks past a large poster for the iPhone 5 on the wall of a Carphone Warehouse retailer.
    wimbledon20-25-06-2013.jpg
  • Secretariat offices for the staff to Erich Mielke, an exhibit in 'Haus 1' the ministerial headquarters of the Stasi secret police in Communist East Germany, the GDR. Built in 1960, the complex now known as the Stasi Museum. Before the fall of the Wall, it was a 22-hectare complex of espionage whose centrepiece is the office and working quarters of the former Minister of State Security, Mielke who considered their role as the 'shield and sword of the party', conducting one of the world's most efficient spying operations against its political dissenters during its 40-year old socialist history. Between 1950 and 1989, the Stasi employed a total of 274,000 people in an effort to root out the class enemy. During Hitler's Third Reich, the Gestapo had one agent for every 2,000 citizens whereas the Stasi had approximately an spy for every 6.5. Here at the Stasi HQ alone 15,000 were employed plus the many regional stations. German media called East Germany 'the most perfected surveillance state of all time' - administered from this complex of offices.
    berlin_stasi_museum34-07-04-2013.jpg
  • Emulsion paint smeared over window of fish and chip shop Top Nosh, a victim of the recession in West Street Bristol.
    closed_businesses05-27-12_2008.jpg
  • English lady calls home after Barack Obama is declared Presidential winner by CNN during overnight election party in London
    obama_election_night34-05-11-2008.jpg
  • A detail of an emergency Network Rail railway phone at a rail crossing for approaching trains whose route takes them across agricultural marshland near Hadleigh Castle, on 10th September 2019, in Leigh-on-Sea, Essex, England.
    estuary_walk-27-10-09-2019.jpg
  • A 1990s flip-up phone handset being used on the street, on 29th March 1996, in Hong Kong, China.
    cable_and_wireless-29-03-1996_2.jpg
  • A notice for the Samaritans helpline and an empty stone seat on Blackfriars Bridge, on 14th September 2017, in London, England.
    samaritans_seat-01-14-09-2017.jpg
  • Police crime scene tape wrapped around a red phone box in Soho, on 8th March 2017, London borough of Westminster, England.
    phonebox_crime-02-08-03-2017.jpg
  • Police crime scene tape wrapped around a red phone box in Soho, on 8th March 2017, London borough of Westminster, England.
    phonebox_crime-03-08-03-2017.jpg
  • Police crime scene tape wrapped around a red phone box in Soho, on 8th March 2017, London borough of Westminster, England.
    phonebox_crime-04-08-03-2017.jpg
  • Police crime scene tape wrapped around a red phone box in Soho, on 8th March 2017, London borough of Westminster, England.
    phonebox_crime-01-08-03-2017.jpg
  • An ad for Portuguese phone rates in a kiosk at Coimbra university, Portugal.
    portugal_coimbra-29-17-07-2016.jpg
  • Seen through an office foyer window, including a receptionist appearing in red phone box kiosk.
    phone_box05-20-04-2016.jpg
  • Seen through an office foyer window, including a receptionist appearing in red phone box kiosk.
    phone_box02-20-04-2016.jpg
  • Two mothers pushing their baby's buggies, walk past a large poster for the iPhone 5 on the wall of a Carphone Warehouse retailer.
    wimbledon19-25-06-2013.jpg
  • Secretariat offices for the staff to Erich Mielke, an exhibit in 'Haus 1' the ministerial headquarters of the Stasi secret police in Communist East Germany, the GDR. Built in 1960, the complex now known as the Stasi Museum. Before the fall of the Wall, it was a 22-hectare complex of espionage whose centrepiece is the office and working quarters of the former Minister of State Security, Mielke who considered their role as the 'shield and sword of the party', conducting one of the world's most efficient spying operations against its political dissenters during its 40-year old socialist history. Between 1950 and 1989, the Stasi employed a total of 274,000 people in an effort to root out the class enemy. During Hitler's Third Reich, the Gestapo had one agent for every 2,000 citizens whereas the Stasi had approximately an spy for every 6.5. Here at the Stasi HQ alone 15,000 were employed plus the many regional stations. German media called East Germany 'the most perfected surveillance state of all time' - administered from this complex of offices.
    berlin_stasi_museum19-07-04-2013.jpg
  • Secretariat offices for the staff to Erich Mielke, an exhibit in 'Haus 1' the ministerial headquarters of the Stasi secret police in Communist East Germany, the GDR. Built in 1960, the complex now known as the Stasi Museum. Before the fall of the Wall, it was a 22-hectare complex of espionage whose centrepiece is the office and working quarters of the former Minister of State Security, Mielke who considered their role as the 'shield and sword of the party', conducting one of the world's most efficient spying operations against its political dissenters during its 40-year old socialist history. Between 1950 and 1989, the Stasi employed a total of 274,000 people in an effort to root out the class enemy. During Hitler's Third Reich, the Gestapo had one agent for every 2,000 citizens whereas the Stasi had approximately an spy for every 6.5. Here at the Stasi HQ alone 15,000 were employed plus the many regional stations. German media called East Germany 'the most perfected surveillance state of all time' - administered from this complex of offices.
    berlin_stasi_museum14-07-04-2013.jpg
  • Secretariat offices for the staff to Erich Mielke, an exhibit in 'Haus 1' the ministerial headquarters of the Stasi secret police in Communist East Germany, the GDR. Built in 1960, the complex now known as the Stasi Museum. Before the fall of the Wall, it was a 22-hectare complex of espionage whose centrepiece is the office and working quarters of the former Minister of State Security, Mielke who considered their role as the 'shield and sword of the party', conducting one of the world's most efficient spying operations against its political dissenters during its 40-year old socialist history. Between 1950 and 1989, the Stasi employed a total of 274,000 people in an effort to root out the class enemy. During Hitler's Third Reich, the Gestapo had one agent for every 2,000 citizens whereas the Stasi had approximately an spy for every 6.5. Here at the Stasi HQ alone 15,000 were employed plus the many regional stations. German media called East Germany 'the most perfected surveillance state of all time' - administered from this complex of offices.
    berlin_stasi_museum21-07-04-2013.jpg
  • A To Let sign attached to the gate of a building offering space near to the 2012 Olympic Park site.
    olympic_stratford01-22-05-2012.jpg
  • A To Let sign attached to the wall of a vacant building offering space near to the 2012 Olympic Park site.
    2012_stratford18-08-03-2012.jpg
  • A To Let sign attached to the wall of a vacant building offering space near to the 2012 Olympic Park site.
    2012_stratford17-08-03-2012.jpg
  • Large fashion posters belonging to the Reiss store on the corner of Sackville and Vigo Street.
    reiss_models6-28-09-2011.jpg
  • A Samaritans suicide 0845 helpline sign on Brunel's Clifton suspension bridge in Bristol.
    samaritan's_numbers1-08-August-2011.jpg
  • Newsagent kiosk corner landscape.
    newsagent01-17-02-2010.jpg
  • Public phone box at New Lanark, the industrial revolution community village managed by social pioneer Robert Owen.
    new_lanark31-29-07-2010-1.jpg
  • From a high vantage point looking across the atrium of British architect Sir Richard Rogers' Lloyds building, we see the zig-zag-shape stripes of escalators, beyond which we see the desks of insurance underwriters at the Lloyd's building, home of the insurance institution Lloyd's of London which is located in Lime Street, in the heart of the City of London. Lloyd's is a British insurance market. It serves as a meeting place where multiple financial backers or "members", whether individuals (traditionally known as "Names") or corporations, come together to pool and spread risk. Unlike most of its competitors in the reinsurance market and is neither a company nor a corporation. 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. looking across
    RB-0142.jpg
  • Emulsion paint smeared over window of fish and chip shop Top Nosh, a victim of the recession in West Street Bristol.
    closed_businesses04-27-12_2008.jpg
  • English lady calls home after Barack Obama is declared Presidential winner by CNN during overnight election party in London
    obama_election_night35-05-11-2008.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
  • 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_leeson56-01-09-2008.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_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
  • 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_leeson23-01-09-2008.jpg
  • A delegate sends a text message from a mobile phone in a mock-up airliner cabin at the Paris Air Show exhibition at Le Bourget
    paris_air_show089-20-06-2007.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
  • A Weapons Engineering Officer works in his cabin quarters aboard HMS Vigilant, a Vanguard class nuclear submarine.
    5105-RPB59-faslane118-26-09-2007.jpg
  • A well-painted postal box and a peeling K2 telephone box kiosk, on 10th September 2018, near Lingen, Herefordshire, England UK.
    herefordshire_walk-35-10-09-2018.jpg
  • A now disused peeling old K2 telephone box kiosk, on 10th September 2018, near Lingen, Herefordshire, England UK.
    herefordshire_walk-17-10-09-2018.jpg
  • A now disused peeling old K2 telephone box kiosk, on 10th September 2018, near Lingen, Herefordshire, England UK.
    herefordshire_walk-16-10-09-2018.jpg
  • An ad poster with the actor Andile Gumbi as Simba in the Lion King is on the door of a central London telephone kiosk for the Disney production. The man in blue walking past is wearing his taxi driver's license badge around his neck and has perhaps taken a break from his job driving around the capital to pick up an Evening Standard newspaper and some sandwiches from the Pret a Manger food chain. The Lion King, the musical of the Disney cartoon has been running in London's West End since October 1999, breaking its own box office record, taking more than £34m during 2010 - £2m more than the previous year - and ending the year with its best ever week of ticket sales. Big musicals are so far defying the economic gloom, and theatre in general is proving surprisingly resilient. More than 800,000 saw this Disney musical cartoon in its 11th year in West End
    lion_king2-12-09-2011.jpg
  • Businessmen walk past one of the few remaining police signal boxes on Threadneedle Street in the City of London, the capital's historic financial district, on 2nd August 2018, in London, England. The Police box is a public telephone kiosk or callbox for the use of members of the police, or for members of the public to contact the police. It was introduced in the United States in 1877 and was used in the United Kingdom throughout the 20th century from the early 1920s.
    city_people-13-02-08-2018.jpg
  • As the EU's Chief negotiator Michel Barnier meets Theresa May in London to discuss the next stage of Brexit, anti-Brexit protesters walk with the Union Jack and EU flag past a telephone kiosk in Whitehall,  near Downing Street, the official residence of the Prime Minister, on 5th February 2018, in London England.
    eu_flags-15-05-02-2018.jpg
  • A seascape looking towards the Thames estuary, with an Emergency telephone on the Western Esplanade at Southend.
    southend_seafront-02-17-09-2016.jpg
  • Lunchtime City workers walk past the Union Jack-themes telephone kiosk in celebrity chef Gordon Ramsey's restaurant Bread Street Kitchen on (the former Roman thoroughfare) Watling Street, in the City of London, the capital's financial district (aka the Square Mile), on 22nd August 2019, in London, England.
    city_people-22-22-08-2019.jpg
  • With the dome of St. Paul's Cathedral at the end, lunchtime City workers walk past the Union Jack-themes telephone kiosk in celebrity chef Gordon Ramsey's restaurant Bread Street Kitchen on (the former Roman thoroughfare) Watling Street, in the City of London, the capital's financial district (aka the Square Mile), on 22nd August 2019, in London, England.
    city_people-21-22-08-2019.jpg
  • Lunchtime City workers walk past the Union Jack-themes telephone kiosk in celebrity chef Gordon Ramsey's restaurant Bread Street Kitchen on (the former Roman thoroughfare) Watling Street, in the City of London, the capital's financial district (aka the Square Mile), on 22nd August 2019, in London, England.
    city_people-20-22-08-2019.jpg
  • Lunchtime City workers walk past the Union Jack-themes telephone kiosk in celebrity chef Gordon Ramsey's restaurant Bread Street Kitchen on (the former Roman thoroughfare) Watling Street, in the City of London, the capital's financial district (aka the Square Mile), on 22nd August 2019, in London, England.
    city_people-19-22-08-2019.jpg
  • Lunchtime City workers walk past the Union Jack-themes telephone kiosk in celebrity chef Gordon Ramsey's restaurant Bread Street Kitchen on (the former Roman thoroughfare) Watling Street, in the City of London, the capital's financial district (aka the Square Mile), on 22nd August 2019, in London, England.
    city_people-18-22-08-2019.jpg
  • Lunchtime City workers walk past the Union Jack-themes telephone kiosk in celebrity chef Gordon Ramsey's restaurant Bread Street Kitchen on (the former Roman thoroughfare) Watling Street, in the City of London, the capital's financial district (aka the Square Mile), on 22nd August 2019, in London, England.
    city_people-17-22-08-2019.jpg
  • Lunchtime City workers walk past the Union Jack-themes telephone kiosk in celebrity chef Gordon Ramsey's restaurant Bread Street Kitchen on (the former Roman thoroughfare) Watling Street, in the City of London, the capital's financial district (aka the Square Mile), on 22nd August 2019, in London, England.
    city_people-16-22-08-2019.jpg
  • A businessman walks past one of the few remaining police signal boxes on Threadneedle Street  in the City of London, the capital's historic financial district, on 2nd August 2018, in London, England. The Police box is a public telephone kiosk or callbox for the use of members of the police, or for members of the public to contact the police. It was introduced in the United States in 1877 and was used in the United Kingdom throughout the 20th century from the early 1920s.
    city_people-14-02-08-2018.jpg
  • A Londoner walks past one of the few remaining police signal boxes on Threadneedle Street in the City of London, the capital's historic financial district, on 2nd August 2018, in London, England. The Police box is a public telephone kiosk or callbox for the use of members of the police, or for members of the public to contact the police. It was introduced in the United States in 1877 and was used in the United Kingdom throughout the 20th century from the early 1920s.
    city_people-12-02-08-2018.jpg
  • A seascape looking towards the Thames estuary, with an Emergency telephone on the Western Esplanade at Southend.
    southend_seafront-01-17-09-2016.jpg
  • Wall's ice cream ad on telephone kiosk and regeneration project hoarding image at Elephant & Castle, London borough of Southwark.
    elephant_and_castle01-22-04-2015.jpg
  • Single telephone that is now only contact with local officers at closed East Dulwich police station, Lordship Lane.
    dulwich_police01-02-01-2015.jpg
  • In front of an ad for Mercury, the 90s mobile phone network provider, a city worker uses his mobile phone in a London street.  Actor Harry Enfield was the face of the media campaign on tv and in print to help promote the young industry, still then an expensive accessory for the ordinary Briton. Mercury Communications, was a national telephone company in the United Kingdom, formed in 1981 as a subsidiary of Cable & Wireless to challenge the monopoly of British Telecom (BT). Mercury was the first competitor to BT, and although it proved only moderately successful at challenging their dominance, it was to set the path for new communication companies to attempt the same. In 1997, Mercury ceased to exist as a brand with its amalgamation into the operations of Cable & Wireless Communications and totally exited from the telecommunications business by 1999.
    mercury_phone-15-07-1993.jpg
  • A sandwich shop chef in red hat hands out meal deal information beside two red London telephone box kiosks.
    phone_kiosks04-04-09-2012.jpg
  • A line of information kiosks, pretend phone boxes provided by Newjam Council, the borough hosting during the London 2012 Olympics, the 30th Olympiad. As a team member makes a call outsidethe iconic shape of the red telephone box known as the quintessential British design, crowds of spectators and travellers pass-by near the main Olympic Park complex. A mother pushes her child's buggy and Newham employees hand out local maps and info to Olympic visitors.
    olympic_stratford39-06-08-2012.jpg
  • Pedestrians and Londoners pass a red telephone box in a street scene in the City of London.
    phone_box01-24-05-2012.jpg
  • Young students on telephone box during protest against government education cuts in Trafalgar Square. Holding a variety of splinter marches that denounce the coalition government's policy of charging extra higher-education tuition fees. There were isolated incidents of violence and skirmishes with police, mostly in central London.
    student_protest14-30-11-2010.jpg
  • Young student climbs on to telephone kiosk box during protest against government education cuts in Trafalgar Square. Holding a variety of splinter marches that denounce the coalition government's policy of charging extra higher-education tuition fees. There were isolated incidents of violence and skirmishes with police, mostly in central London.
    student_protest13-30-11-2010.jpg
  • Tourists indulge in souvenir pictures near red telephone box near St. Paul's Cathedral.
    lunchtime_sleepers04-02-07-2010.jpg
Next
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
x

Richard Baker Photography

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