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  • 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
  • Detail of an Alfa Romeo grill and badge, on 23rd April 2017, in Wrington, North Somerset, England.
    alpha_grill-01-23-04-2017.jpg
  • A detail of a Rover grill in the German BMW-owned Rover production factory in Cowley, Solihull, England. With the car manufacturer's logo of a Viking longship prominent, is the silver radiator guard. Motor car production has taken place at Cowley near the city of Oxford, England for over ninety years. The car factory is known today as Plant Oxford and is now owned by BMW and has been extensively redeveloped. It remains the largest industrial employer in Oxfordshire employing more than 4,300 people.
    range_rover_factory01-20-11-1994.jpg
  • Found in a garage where it had been stored virtually untouched for 50 years, this 1937 Bugatti Type 57s Atalante sports car is previewed for the first time before a Bonhams auction in Paris on February 7th 2009. Here, we see a detail of its radiator grill and patent number in a garage/studio before the auction and sale in Paris. In 2008 the Bugatti Type 57S with chassis number 57502 built in 1937 with the Atalante coachwork for Earl Howe was discovered in a private garage in Newcastle upon Tyne, having been stored untouched for 48 years and known about only by a select few people. It was auctioned in February 2009 at the Retromobile motor show in Paris, France, fetching EUR3.4 million (US$4.6 million), becoming one of the highest valued cars in automotive history, owing much to its extremely low mileage, original condition and ownership pedigree.
    bugatti11-09-01_2009.jpg
  • Found in a garage where it had been stored virtually untouched for 50 years, this 1937 Bugatti Type 57s Atalante sports car is previewed for the first time before a Bonhams auction in Paris on February 7th 2009. Here, we see a detail of its radiator grill in a garage/studio before the auction and sale in Paris. In 2008 the Bugatti Type 57S with chassis number 57502 built in 1937 with the Atalante coachwork for Earl Howe was discovered in a private garage in Newcastle upon Tyne, having been stored untouched for 48 years and known about only by a select few people. It was auctioned in February 2009 at the Retromobile motor show in Paris, France, fetching EUR3.4 million (US$4.6 million), becoming one of the highest valued cars in automotive history, owing much to its extremely low mileage, original condition and ownership pedigree.
    bugatti10-09-01_2009.jpg
  • A detail of a crashed Ford car whose grill and bonnet has been crushed after a head-on collision, on 3rd February 2020, in London, England
    ford_crash-01-03-02-2020.jpg
  • A detail of a crashed Ford car whose grill and bonnet has been crushed after a head-on collision, on 3rd February 2020, in London, England. According to the Dept. of Transport, 13,420 Britons were killed or seriously injured by road accidents  in 2018/19.
    ford_crash-02-03-02-2020.jpg
  • Days after the terrorist attacks on America in September 2001, we see front grill and bonnet (hood) paintwork of a parked US Government Ford car in Greenwich Village, scratched by scraped dirt and covered in concrete dust and grit that has been blown from nearby collapsed buildings at Ground Zero. The bent number plate of this now wrecked Federal-owned vehicle shows the impact on property and on the US economy. Total damage after this al-Qaeda plot has been put at $100 billion including: the loss of four civilian aircraft, buildings, the Pentagon, cleanup, property and infrastructure. emergency funds, job losses, unrecoverable property, insurance and air traffic revenue.
    9:11_government_car-15-09-2001.jpg
  • A grilled doorway and painted no parking message on 4th January, London borough of Southwark, England.
    southwark_estate-18-04-01-2017.jpg
  • A young 10 year-old boy enjoys a fresh Maldives line caught yellow fin tuna steak, grilled in his London home on a Friday night
    new_england160-15-12-2007 .jpg
  • Fresh Maldives line caught yellow fin tuna steaks are grilled in heavy pan on a Friday night in a London kitchen
    new_england146-15-12-2007 .jpg
  • Fresh Maldives line caught yellow fin tuna steaks are served grilled with green haricot beans in a London home
    new_england153-15-12-2007 .jpg
  • A Massey Ferguson tractor on a rural smallholding on 22nd April 2017, in Wrington, North Somerset, England.
    tractor_grill-02-22-04-2017.jpg
  • A Massey Ferguson tractor on a rural smallholding on 22nd April 2017, in Wrington, North Somerset, England.
    tractor_grill-01-22-04-2017.jpg
  • A 1954 Rolls-Royce Silver Dawn is parked in Smith Square, a small square behind the Houses of Parliament, before collecting its VIP passengers - barristers who are being sworn in as QCs (aka Silks in legal vernacular), on 11th March 2019, in London, England.
    classic_cars-04-11-03-2019.jpg
  • Detail of a British car club and motoring car badges including for the AA (Automobile Association), the patron saint of travel St Christopher, Scotland and the RAC (Royal Automobile Club), on the back of a vintage Rover car, on 29th June 2017, in Greenwich, London, England.
    car_badge-09-29-06-2017.jpg
  • Anti-theft signs attached to chicken wire mesh at the front door of All Saints Church in Hartest, on 10th July 2020, in Hartest, Suffolk, England.
    suffolk-41-10-07-2020.jpg
  • A 1954 Rolls-Royce Silver Dawn is parked in Smith Square, a small square behind the Houses of Parliament, before collecting its VIP passengers - barristers who are being sworn in as QCs (aka Silks in legal vernacular), on 11th March 2019, in London, England.
    classic_cars-07-11-03-2019.jpg
  • A 1954 Rolls-Royce Silver Dawn is parked in Smith Square, a small square behind the Houses of Parliament, before collecting its VIP passengers - barristers who are being sworn in as QCs (aka Silks in legal vernacular), on 11th March 2019, in London, England.
    classic_cars-27-11-03-2019.jpg
  • A 1954 Rolls-Royce Silver Dawn is parked in Smith Square, a small square behind the Houses of Parliament, before collecting its VIP passengers - barristers who are being sworn in as QCs (aka Silks in legal vernacular), on 11th March 2019, in London, England.
    classic_cars-06-11-03-2019.jpg
  • A detail of a Santa sticker displayed in a security window of a vacant East End home, on 2nd January 2017, London, England.
    santa_window-01-02-01-2017.jpg
  • Workman carries construction fencing panel past bending maintenance man in Trafalgar Square.
    workman_fencing01-19-03-2012.jpg
  • A chef demonstrates the techniques for stir-fying vegetables to a young trainee at the Vivre restaurant in Sofitel.
    heathrow_airport1239-15-08-2009.jpg
  • Opening security gate asking visitors to stop and ring here at the Delacre biscuit production factory in Lambermont, Belgium.
    lambermont-biscuits54.jpg
  • Razor-wire and fencing protects garden shrubs and plant stocks at a town garden centre in Kourou, French Guiana.
    esa_guiana34917-08-2007.jpg
  • A restaurant business shut up for the night in the new quarter of Kourou in colonial French Guiana
    esa_guiana26616-08-2007.jpg
  • Secure razor wire and fencing keeps tresspassers out from the European Space Agency's Neptune buildings in French Guiana. .
    esa_guiana03414-08-2007.jpg
  • Secure razor wire and fencing keeps tresspassers out from the European Space Agency's Neptune buildings in French Guiana. .
    esa_guiana03113-08-2007.jpg
  • Unfinished and abandoned construction project in the town of Gogollos Vega, near Granada.
    spain_recession-17-14-April-2011.jpg
  • Hazard and danger warning signs on the Kaneb bulk liquid storage terminal on the River Thames at Grays, Thames Gateway
    river_business89-31-08-2007.jpg
  • Green stained render on walls of building in Eppan-Appiano, South Tyrol, northern Italy.
    appiano_italy59-12-07-2015.jpg
  • Green stained render on walls of building in Eppan-Appiano, South Tyrol, northern Italy.
    appiano_italy57-12-07-2015.jpg
  • Unfinished and abandoned construction project in the town of Gogollos Vega, near Granada.
    spain_recession-16-14-April-2011.jpg
  • A labourer reads a copy of Britain's tabloid Sun Newspaper. The worker holds a coffee and wears a working mans' cap with a pencil in his right ear as he sits in sunshine during a lunch break. In the context of the News International media scandals of 2011, the (daily) Sun is a sister paper to the now defunct (Sunday) News of The World, closed down by proprietor Rupert Murdoch in the light of public outrage over phone hacking. The Sun's own headline refers to the previous day when Murdoch sat before a Parliamentary Select Committee to answer questions about the nature of phone hacking into private voicemails of victims and their grieving families. Murdoch's overall message was the committee grilling was his most humble day.
    tabloid_workman4-20-July-2011.jpg
  • A labourer reads a copy of Britain's tabloid Sun Newspaper. The worker holds a coffee and wears a working mans' cap with a pencil in his right ear as he sits in sunshine during a lunch break. In the context of the News International media scandals of 2011, the (daily) Sun is a sister paper to the now defunct (Sunday) News of The World, closed down by proprietor Rupert Murdoch in the light of public outrage over phone hacking. The Sun's own headline refers to the previous day when Murdoch sat before a Parliamentary Select Committee to answer questions about the nature of phone hacking into private voicemails of victims and their grieving families. Murdoch's overall message was the committee grilling was his most humble day.
    tabloid_workman2-20-July-2011.jpg
  • Found in a garage where it had been stored virtually untouched for 50 years, this 1937 Bugatti Type 57s Atalante sports car is previewd for the first time before a Bonhams auction in Paris on February 7th 2009. Exclusive patent number and radiator grill.
    bugatti11-09-01_2009.jpg
  • The locked and security grilled doorway of a Pakistani takeaway shop on the Lumb Lane near Bradford City centre, Yorkshire.
    bradford_windows02-09-05-2009.jpg
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Richard Baker Photography

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