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  • Family stands with Scottish piper at Gretna Green, where Britain's wedding couples converge on for a quickie marriage.
    gretna_green02-29-07-2010-1.jpg
  • A defibrillator located inside an old phone box, to be used by the public in emergencies, placed opposite the Bucks Head pub in Godden Green, 5th January 2019, in Kent, England.
    walkers-09-05-01-2020.jpg
  • A pile of muddy woodland walkers' boots which have been left outside the Bucks Head pub in Godden Green, 5th January 2019, in Kent, England.
    walkers-08-05-01-2020.jpg
  • A woodland walker leaves his muddy boots next to a pile of other outdoor walkers' boots which have been left outside the Bucks Head pub in Godden Green, 5th January 2019, in Kent, England.
    walkers-05-05-01-2020.jpg
  • A defibrillator located inside an old phone box, to be used by the public in emergencies, placed opposite the Bucks Head pub in Godden Green, 5th January 2019, in Kent, England.
    walkers-10-05-01-2020.jpg
  • A pile of muddy woodland walkers' boots which have been left outside the Bucks Head pub in Godden Green, 5th January 2019, in Kent, England.
    walkers-06-05-01-2020.jpg
  • A woodland walker leaves his muddy boots next to a pile of other outdoor walkers' boots which have been left outside the Bucks Head pub in Godden Green, 5th January 2019, in Kent, England.
    walkers-05-05-01-2020.jpg
  • A woodland walker leaves his muddy boots next to a pile of other outdoor walkers' boots which have been left outside the Bucks Head pub in Godden Green, 5th January 2019, in Kent, England.
    walkers-07-05-01-2020.jpg
  • A defibrillator located inside an old phone box, to be used by the public in emergencies, placed opposite the Bucks Head pub in Godden Green, 5th January 2019, in Kent, England.
    walkers-10-05-01-2020.jpg
  • A woodland walker leaves his muddy boots next to a pile of other outdoor walkers' boots which have been left outside the Bucks Head pub in Godden Green, 5th January 2019, in Kent, England.
    walkers-07-05-01-2020.jpg
  • A pile of muddy woodland walkers' boots which have been left outside the Bucks Head pub in Godden Green, 5th January 2019, in Kent, England.
    walkers-06-05-01-2020.jpg
  • A defibrillator located inside an old phone box, to be used by the public in emergencies, placed opposite the Bucks Head pub in Godden Green, 5th January 2019, in Kent, England.
    walkers-09-05-01-2020.jpg
  • A pile of muddy woodland walkers' boots which have been left outside the Bucks Head pub in Godden Green, 5th January 2019, in Kent, England.
    walkers-08-05-01-2020.jpg
  • Surrounded by modernist architecture, a man sorts through a swatch of green pantones with green tree behind.
    green_swatch02-08-04-2011.jpg
  • Green hydraulic crane stretches up to top floor of building in centralLondon.
    Green_crane01-20-05-2010.jpg
  • Two Asian girls check directions in central London near one of the green cirlces outside M&M's World's Leicester Square store, on 31st July 2017, in London, England.
    green_circle-01-31-07-2017.jpg
  • A man and young boy walk past one of the green cirlces outside M&M's World's Leicester Square store, on 31st July 2017, in London, England.
    green_circle-02-31-07-2017.jpg
  • A red and green construction hoarding with a pedestrian walking past wearing identical colours, on 16th February 2017, in the City of London, England.
    green_red_hoarding-02-16-02-2017.jpg
  • A red and green construction hoarding with a pedestrian walking past wearing identical colours, on 16th February 2017, in the City of London, England.
    green_red_hoarding-01-16-02-2017.jpg
  • Green tent for street food and circles of Seven Dials tea cafe.
    green_tent02-17-10-2014.jpg
  • Green busker person walks past schoolchildren with pigeon seemingly perched on shoulder.
    green_man01-13-02-2014.jpg
  • Detail of green shoots of growing runner bean plant in back garden.
    green_shoots3-27-May-2011.jpg
  • A landscape of Green Park and Piccadilly with a solid anti-terrorist barrier, on 19th November 2017, in London, England.
    green_park-03-19-11-2017.jpg
  • A woman in yellow and wearing round sunglasses walks past one of the green cirlces outside M&M's World's Leicester Square store, on 31st July 2017, in London, England.
    green_circle-05-31-07-2017.jpg
  • A man and young boy walk past one of the green cirlces outside M&M's World's Leicester Square store, on 31st July 2017, in London, England.
    green_circle-03-31-07-2017.jpg
  • Detail of green shoots of growing runner bean plant in back garden.
    green_shoots2-27-May-2011.jpg
  • Detail of green shoots of growing runner bean plant in back garden.
    green_shoots1-27-May-2011.jpg
  • A landscape of Green Park and Piccadilly with a solid anti-terrorist barrier, on 19th November 2017, in London, England.
    green_park-01-19-11-2017.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_green29-01-05-2013.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_green23-01-05-2013.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_green22-01-05-2013.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_green16-01-05-2013.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_green15-01-05-2013.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_green12-01-05-2013.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
  • Residential flats and apartments overlook the illuminated roundel of London Underground's Green Park tube station and the iron gates of Green Park that leads downhill towards Buckingham Palace, on 3rd February 2021, in London, England.
    GreenPark_station01-03-02-2021.jpg
  • Residential flats and apartments overlook the illuminated roundel of London Underground's Green Park tube station and the iron gates of Green Park that leads downhill towards Buckingham Palace, on 3rd February 2021, in London, England.
    GreenPark_station03-03-02-2021.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_green36-01-05-2013.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_green31-01-05-2013.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_green28-01-05-2013.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_green24-01-05-2013.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_green18-01-05-2013.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_green19-01-05-2013.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_green14-01-05-2013.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_green11-01-05-2013.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_green10-01-05-2013.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_green07-01-05-2013.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_green09-01-05-2013.jpg
  • In pouring rain, United States Air Force pilots stand like canmouflaged statues in the undergrowth near Fairchild Air Force Base, Spokane, Washington. They are listening to a USAF survival instructor giving them advice about another challenge they are about to face, a few hundred yards ahead in the woods, so they listen intently in the saturatedconditions. They stand motionless, green figures in a green maze of foliage, wearing waterproof cagoules covering their backpacks which are shiny as the rain trickles down. They look like hunchbacks of the forest. The week-long survival course is held at the military facilities around Fairchild where the Air Force conducts a survival, escape and evasion course which combat pilots need to pass before rejoining their units for real-time warfare. This part of the lecture is held in the forest and forms part of an extensive physical and psychological assessment for young aviators on active service. In the future any one of them may be shot down behind enemy lines and need to use the lessons passed-on here to help facilitate their rescue by US forces. One pilot who passed this course in 1991, himself a Spokane-born boy, was F-16 pilot Scott O'Grady. He put his skills learned here to the test while evading Serb forces before being airlifted to safety and a hero's Presidential welcome.
    RB-0163.jpg
  • On the third anniversary of the UK leaving the European Union (EU), green painted arrows point in different directions, a remnant of Covid pandemic social distancing rules at Thorpe Bay near Southend-on-Sea, on 31st January 2023, in Southend, England. In the 2016 EU Referendum, 39,348 voters  in Southend-on-Sea voted to Remain (41.9%) and 54,522 (58.1%) to Leave. The UK officially left the EU on 31st January 2020.
    brexit_estuary-29-31-01-2023.jpg
  • On the third anniversary of the UK leaving the European Union (EU), green painted arrows point in different directions, a remnant of Covid pandemic social distancing rules at Thorpe Bay near Southend-on-Sea, on 31st January 2023, in Southend, England. In the 2016 EU Referendum, 39,348 voters  in Southend-on-Sea voted to Remain (41.9%) and 54,522 (58.1%) to Leave. The UK officially left the EU on 31st January 2020.
    brexit_estuary-28-31-01-2023.jpg
  • Ten years after the London 2012 Olympics were based here at Stratford, is the curved architecture of the Aquatic Centre which still dominates the The Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park, on 14th June 2022, in London, England. The former main Olympic venue area was controversially re-landscaped from an old industrial estate. Its promised legacy is a green space now known as The Elizabeth Park which remains a wildlife habitat and whose centrepieces are still the Velodrome and Aquatic Centre used by the public while the main Olympic statium is home to West Ham Football Club of the Aquatic Centre still dominates the entrance to The Elizabeth Park, on 14th June 2022, in London, England. The former main Olympic venue area was controversially re-landscaped from an old industrial estate. Its promised legacy is a green space now known as The Elizabeth Park which remains a wildlife habitat and whose centrepieces are still the Velodrome and Aquatic Centre used by the public while the main Olympic statium is home to West Ham Football Club.
    elizabeth_park-03-14-06-2022.jpg
  • Reflected green light illuminates 70 Mark Lane in the City of London, a day before Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Foreign Secretary Liz Truss fly to Ukraine. Amid tensions between Ukraine and Russia, the British government is again threatening economic sanctions on Russian president Putin-friendly oligarchs who, it is believed, launder their ‘dirty money’, on 31st January 2022, in the City of London, England. Campaign group 'Transparency International' say an estimated £1.5bn of UK property has been spent with suspect funds from Russia, via the City of London, the UK capital's financial district.
    city_russians-75-31-01-2022.jpg
  • A local dog walker passes an idyllic landscape of green fields and farmland that will soon change forever when it will be built upon by housing developer Taylor Wimpey at Netherton Grange, Youngwood Lane, Nailsea, on 31st May 2021, in Nailsea, North Somerset, England. Nearly 170 homes are set to be built here on the edge of Nailsea after detailed plans were approved. Thirty per cent of the homes will be affordable.
    housing_landscape09-31-05-2021.jpg
  • An idyllic landscape of green fields and farmland that will soon change forever when it will be built upon by housing developer Taylor Wimpey at Netherton Grange, Youngwood Lane, Nailsea, on 31st May 2021, in Nailsea, North Somerset, England. Nearly 170 homes are set to be built here on the edge of Nailsea after detailed plans were approved. Thirty per cent of the homes will be affordable.
    housing_landscape05-31-05-2021.jpg
  • An idyllic landscape of grazing sheep in green fields and farmland that will soon change forever when it will be built upon by housing developer Taylor Wimpey at Netherton Grange, Youngwood Lane, Nailsea, on 31st May 2021, in Nailsea, North Somerset, England. Nearly 170 homes are set to be built here on the edge of Nailsea after detailed plans were approved. Thirty per cent of the homes will be affordable.
    housing_landscape03-31-05-2021.jpg
  • An idyllic landscape of grazing sheep in green fields and farmland that will soon change forever when it will be built upon by housing developer Taylor Wimpey at Netherton Grange, Youngwood Lane, Nailsea, on 31st May 2021, in Nailsea, North Somerset, England. Nearly 170 homes are set to be built here on the edge of Nailsea after detailed plans were approved. Thirty per cent of the homes will be affordable.
    housing_landscape01-31-05-2021.jpg
  • Residential flats and apartments overlook the illuminated roundel of London Underground's Green Park tube station and the iron gates of Green Park that leads downhill towards Buckingham Palace, on 3rd February 2021, in London, England.
    GreenPark_station02-03-02-2021.jpg
  • With a further 184 reported UK Covid deaths in the last 24 hrs, a total now of 43,414, an artist creates art with Buckingham Palace in Green Park within view during the last stages of the pandemic, on 26th June 2020, in London, England. Many have found lockdown as an opportiunity to be more creatively active and closer to the natural world. Government restrictions on the 2 metre rule is to be realxed on 4th July and replaced with 'one metre plus' in the hope it stimulates the struggling UK economy.
    coronavirus_westend-24-26-06-2020.jpg
  • A local man mows grass with green housing and garden orchards near Lake Bled, on 18th June 2018, in Bled, Slovenia.
    slovenia-53-18-06-2018.jpg
  • A sign for the Friends of Green Dale, a quiet public pedestrian and cycle route that once bordered the garden of Victorian industrialist Henry Bessemer, in the borough of Southwark, on 24th February 2018, in south London, England.
    greendale_friends-02-24-02-2018.jpg
  • A portrait of British environmentalist, Jonathon Porritt while head of Friends of the Earth, in the summer of 1989, London UK. Porritt's first book, Seeing Green, was published in 1984 when he also gave up teaching to become Director of Friends of the Earth in Britain, a post he held until 1990.Jonathon Espie Porritt, CBE (b1950) is a British environmentalist and writer, known for his advocacy of the Green Party of England and Wales.
    jonathan_porritt-01-06-1986.jpg
  • Pennents and bunting on the village green at Horning, a tourist village on the Norfolk Broads.
    norfolk_village02-01-08-2013.jpg
  • Healthy green leaves sprout from a tree below an office building, a scene of economic prosperity, growth and recovery.
    city_tree02-27-04-2012.jpg
  • Healthy green leaves sprout from a tree below an office building, a scene of economic prosperity, growth and recovery.
    city_tree01-27-04-2012.jpg
  • Padlocked green doors of market stallholder.
    market_stand01-25-11-2009.jpg
  • A Green Party sign and bicycle urging voters to vote for Brighton candidate Caroline Lucas.
    vote_green04-01-05-2010.jpg
  • A Green Party sign and bicycle urging voters to vote for Brighton candidate Caroline Lucas.
    vote_green02-01-05-2010.jpg
  • Looking upwards through a gap in some trees, we see in the background the huge skyscraper office tower of the Commerzbank (Europe's tallest building (1997-2005), designed by Sir Norman Foster) and other institutions in the financial district of Frankfurt, Germany. In the foreground is a set of traffic lights with a traffic lane arrow direction sign and during the long time-exposure the red, amber and green lights have registered on the film to say stop, ready, go. There is a light mist settling on the cityscape which can be seen around the intense of the street lighting giving the scene a futuristic atmosphere like the Blade Runner movie. Apart from the prime colours (colors) emitted by the traffic lights, the image has an otherwise green hue including the tree foliage which is illuminated by the artificial lamps. The leaves are also blurring because of a faint breeze which registers during a long time-exposure.
    RB-0022.jpg
  • A Polish man leans over to put the finishing touches to two small snowmen that now occupy a park bench on Goose Green in East Dulwich, Southwark, South London, England. This otherwise green space has seen snow falls that have gripped this part of the capital with unsalted road surfaces and commuting nightmares. But this young man is having fun with his diminutive snowy creations who have been dressed up in his and a friend's glasses, their scarves and gloves and with locally-found twigs. The park is relatively quiet with only a hint of the chaos elsewhere but the time spent on pointless pursuits is one way of enjoying adverse weather, rather than the more serious business of getting to work, proving also that snow brings out the childish nature in us all.
    london_snows33-13-01-2010 copy.jpg
  • Some of the derelict military outbuildings that once served as wartime purposes during WW2, near Joyce Green Farm and the Darent Valley Path in the Dartford Marshes in north Kent, on 19th February 2023, in London, England.
    dartford_marshes-21-19-02-2023.jpg
  • Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II at the age of 96 last week and the day before her state funeral, the public buy bunches of flowers at inflated prices at the entrance to Green Park where a temporary memorial garden has been established to accommodate fresh floral tributes, on 18th September 2022, in London, England. As a passionate environmentalist, the new monarch, King Charles III, has been known to oppose the use of plastic wrappings on flowers and has previously asked that the public dispose of such wrappings responsibly.
    queen_dead-04-18-09-2022.jpg
  • Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II at the age of 96 last week and the day before her state funeral, the public buy bunches of flowers at inflated prices at the entrance to Green Park where a temporary memorial garden has been established to accommodate fresh floral tributes, on 18th September 2022, in London, England. As a passionate environmentalist, the new monarch, King Charles III, has been known to oppose the use of plastic wrappings on flowers and has previously asked that the public dispose of such wrappings responsibly.
    queen_dead-01-18-09-2022.jpg
  • Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II at the age of 96 last week and the day before her state funeral, the public have been bringing flowers to Green Park where a temporary memorial garden has been established to accommodate fresh floral tributes, on 18th September 2022, in London, England. As a passionate environmentalist, the new monarch, King Charles III, has been known to oppose the use of plastic wrappings on flowers and has previously asked that the public dispose of such wrappings responsibly.
    queen_dead-09-18-09-2022.jpg
  • Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II at the age of 96 last week and the day before her state funeral, the public have been bringing flowers to Green Park where a temporary memorial garden has been established to accommodate fresh floral tributes, on 18th September 2022, in London, England. As a passionate environmentalist, the new monarch, King Charles III, has been known to oppose the use of plastic wrappings on flowers and has previously asked that the public dispose of such wrappings responsibly.
    queen_dead-08-18-09-2022.jpg
  • Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II at the age of 96 last week, her face is seen outdie Green Park Underground Station on Piccadilly, on 11th September 2022, London, England. Queen Elizabeth came to the British throne in 1952 and was, after 70 years, the longest reigning monarch in British history. Succeeded by her eldest son Charles, his new title of King Charles III heralds a new era for Britain's monarchy and consitution. But authorities are warning of mass disruption on public transport for estimated record numbers of well-wishers arriving in the capital for the former monarch's Lying-in-State - and also for next week's funeral.
    queen_dead-88-11-09-2022.jpg
  • Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II at the age of 96 last week, fresh floral tributes are being brought to a temporary memorial garden in Green Park where Royal Parks staff are helped by members of the public, including children, volunteering to remove plastic wrappers from bouquets - plus those left earlier at the gates of Buckingham Palace, in 11th September 2022, in London, England. As a passionate environmentalist, the new monarch, King Charles III, has been known to oppose the use of plastic wrappings on flowers and has previously asked that the public dispose of such wrappings responsibly.
    queen_dead-84-11-09-2022.jpg
  • Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II at the age of 96 last week, fresh floral tributes are being brought to a temporary memorial garden in Green Park where Royal Parks staff are helped by members of the public, including children, volunteering to remove plastic wrappers from bouquets - plus those left earlier at the gates of Buckingham Palace, in 11th September 2022, in London, England. As a passionate environmentalist, the new monarch, King Charles III, has been known to oppose the use of plastic wrappings on flowers and has previously asked that the public dispose of such wrappings responsibly.
    queen_dead-85-11-09-2022.jpg
  • Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II at the age of 96 last week, fresh floral tributes are being brought to a temporary memorial garden in Green Park where Royal Parks staff are helped by members of the public, including children, volunteering to remove plastic wrappers from bouquets - plus those left earlier at the gates of Buckingham Palace, in 11th September 2022, in London, England. As a passionate environmentalist, the new monarch, King Charles III, has been known to oppose the use of plastic wrappings on flowers and has previously asked that the public dispose of such wrappings responsibly.
    queen_dead-83-11-09-2022.jpg
  • Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II at the age of 96 last week, fresh floral tributes are being brought to a temporary memorial garden in Green Park where Royal Parks staff are helped by members of the public, including children, volunteering to remove plastic wrappers from bouquets - plus those left earlier at the gates of Buckingham Palace, in 11th September 2022, in London, England. As a passionate environmentalist, the new monarch, King Charles III, has been known to oppose the use of plastic wrappings on flowers and has previously asked that the public dispose of such wrappings responsibly.
    queen_dead-82-11-09-2022.jpg
  • Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II at the age of 96 last week, fresh floral tributes are being brought to a temporary memorial garden in Green Park where Royal Parks staff are helped by members of the public, including children, volunteering to remove plastic wrappers from bouquets - plus those left earlier at the gates of Buckingham Palace, in 11th September 2022, in London, England. As a passionate environmentalist, the new monarch, King Charles III, has been known to oppose the use of plastic wrappings on flowers and has previously asked that the public dispose of such wrappings responsibly.
    queen_dead-81-11-09-2022.jpg
  • Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II at the age of 96 last week, fresh floral tributes are being brought to a temporary memorial garden in Green Park where Royal Parks staff are helped by members of the public, including children, volunteering to remove plastic wrappers from bouquets - plus those left earlier at the gates of Buckingham Palace, in 11th September 2022, in London, England. As a passionate environmentalist, the new monarch, King Charles III, has been known to oppose the use of plastic wrappings on flowers and has previously asked that the public dispose of such wrappings responsibly.
    queen_dead-78-11-09-2022.jpg
  • Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II at the age of 96 last week, fresh floral tributes are being brought to a temporary memorial garden in Green Park where Royal Parks staff are helped by members of the public, including children, volunteering to remove plastic wrappers from bouquets - plus those left earlier at the gates of Buckingham Palace, in 11th September 2022, in London, England. As a passionate environmentalist, the new monarch, King Charles III, has been known to oppose the use of plastic wrappings on flowers and has previously asked that the public dispose of such wrappings responsibly.
    queen_dead-76-11-09-2022.jpg
  • Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II at the age of 96 last week, fresh floral tributes are being brought to a temporary memorial garden in Green Park where Royal Parks staff are helped by members of the public, including children, volunteering to remove plastic wrappers from bouquets - plus those left earlier at the gates of Buckingham Palace, in 11th September 2022, in London, England. As a passionate environmentalist, the new monarch, King Charles III, has been known to oppose the use of plastic wrappings on flowers and has previously asked that the public dispose of such wrappings responsibly.
    queen_dead-75-11-09-2022.jpg
  • Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II at the age of 96 last week, fresh floral tributes are being brought to a temporary memorial garden in Green Park where Royal Parks staff are helped by members of the public, including children, volunteering to remove plastic wrappers from bouquets - plus those left earlier at the gates of Buckingham Palace, in 11th September 2022, in London, England. As a passionate environmentalist, the new monarch, King Charles III, has been known to oppose the use of plastic wrappings on flowers and has previously asked that the public dispose of such wrappings responsibly.
    queen_dead-73-11-09-2022.jpg
  • Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II at the age of 96 last week, fresh floral tributes are being brought to a temporary memorial garden in Green Park where Royal Parks staff are helped by members of the public, including children, volunteering to remove plastic wrappers from bouquets - plus those left earlier at the gates of Buckingham Palace, in 11th September 2022, in London, England. As a passionate environmentalist, the new monarch, King Charles III, has been known to oppose the use of plastic wrappings on flowers and has previously asked that the public dispose of such wrappings responsibly.
    queen_dead-74-11-09-2022.jpg
  • Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II at the age of 96 last week, fresh floral tributes are being brought to a temporary memorial garden in Green Park where Royal Parks staff are helped by members of the public, including children, volunteering to remove plastic wrappers from bouquets - plus those left earlier at the gates of Buckingham Palace, in 11th September 2022, in London, England. As a passionate environmentalist, the new monarch, King Charles III, has been known to oppose the use of plastic wrappings on flowers and has previously asked that the public dispose of such wrappings responsibly.
    queen_dead-71-11-09-2022.jpg
  • Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II at the age of 96 last week, fresh floral tributes are being brought to a temporary memorial garden in Green Park where Royal Parks staff are helped by members of the public, including children, volunteering to remove plastic wrappers from bouquets - plus those left earlier at the gates of Buckingham Palace, in 11th September 2022, in London, England. As a passionate environmentalist, the new monarch, King Charles III, has been known to oppose the use of plastic wrappings on flowers and has previously asked that the public dispose of such wrappings responsibly.
    queen_dead-68-11-09-2022.jpg
  • Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II at the age of 96 last week, fresh floral tributes are being brought to a temporary memorial garden in Green Park where Royal Parks staff are helped by members of the public, including children, volunteering to remove plastic wrappers from bouquets - plus those left earlier at the gates of Buckingham Palace, in 11th September 2022, in London, England. As a passionate environmentalist, the new monarch, King Charles III, has been known to oppose the use of plastic wrappings on flowers and has previously asked that the public dispose of such wrappings responsibly.
    queen_dead-69-11-09-2022.jpg
  • Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II at the age of 96 last week, fresh floral tributes are being brought to a temporary memorial garden in Green Park where Royal Parks staff are helped by members of the public, including children, volunteering to remove plastic wrappers from bouquets - plus those left earlier at the gates of Buckingham Palace, in 11th September 2022, in London, England. As a passionate environmentalist, the new monarch, King Charles III, has been known to oppose the use of plastic wrappings on flowers and has previously asked that the public dispose of such wrappings responsibly.
    queen_dead-67-11-09-2022.jpg
  • Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II at the age of 96 last week, fresh floral tributes are being brought to a temporary memorial garden in Green Park where Royal Parks staff are helped by members of the public, including children, volunteering to remove plastic wrappers from bouquets - plus those left earlier at the gates of Buckingham Palace, in 11th September 2022, in London, England. As a passionate environmentalist, the new monarch, King Charles III, has been known to oppose the use of plastic wrappings on flowers and has previously asked that the public dispose of such wrappings responsibly.
    queen_dead-62-11-09-2022.jpg
  • Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II at the age of 96 last week, fresh floral tributes are being brought to a temporary memorial garden in Green Park where Royal Parks staff are helped by members of the public, including children, volunteering to remove plastic wrappers from bouquets - plus those left earlier at the gates of Buckingham Palace, in 11th September 2022, in London, England. As a passionate environmentalist, the new monarch, King Charles III, has been known to oppose the use of plastic wrappings on flowers and has previously asked that the public dispose of such wrappings responsibly.
    queen_dead-63-11-09-2022.jpg
  • Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II at the age of 96 last week, fresh floral tributes are being brought to a temporary memorial garden in Green Park where Royal Parks staff are helped by members of the public, including children, volunteering to remove plastic wrappers from bouquets - plus those left earlier at the gates of Buckingham Palace, in 11th September 2022, in London, England. As a passionate environmentalist, the new monarch, King Charles III, has been known to oppose the use of plastic wrappings on flowers and has previously asked that the public dispose of such wrappings responsibly.
    queen_dead-61-11-09-2022.jpg
  • Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II at the age of 96 last week, fresh floral tributes are being brought to a temporary memorial garden in Green Park where Royal Parks staff are helped by members of the public, including children, volunteering to remove plastic wrappers from bouquets - plus those left earlier at the gates of Buckingham Palace, in 11th September 2022, in London, England. As a passionate environmentalist, the new monarch, King Charles III, has been known to oppose the use of plastic wrappings on flowers and has previously asked that the public dispose of such wrappings responsibly.
    queen_dead-58-11-09-2022.jpg
  • Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II at the age of 96 last week, fresh floral tributes are being brought to a temporary memorial garden in Green Park where Royal Parks staff are helped by members of the public, including children, volunteering to remove plastic wrappers from bouquets - plus those left earlier at the gates of Buckingham Palace, in 11th September 2022, in London, England. As a passionate environmentalist, the new monarch, King Charles III, has been known to oppose the use of plastic wrappings on flowers and has previously asked that the public dispose of such wrappings responsibly.
    queen_dead-59-11-09-2022.jpg
  • Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II at the age of 96 last week, fresh floral tributes are being brought to a temporary memorial garden in Green Park where Royal Parks staff are helped by members of the public, including children, volunteering to remove plastic wrappers from bouquets - plus those left earlier at the gates of Buckingham Palace, in 11th September 2022, in London, England. As a passionate environmentalist, the new monarch, King Charles III, has been known to oppose the use of plastic wrappings on flowers and has previously asked that the public dispose of such wrappings responsibly.
    queen_dead-56-11-09-2022.jpg
  • Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II at the age of 96 last week, fresh floral tributes are being brought to a temporary memorial garden in Green Park where Royal Parks staff are helped by members of the public, including children, volunteering to remove plastic wrappers from bouquets - plus those left earlier at the gates of Buckingham Palace, in 11th September 2022, in London, England. As a passionate environmentalist, the new monarch, King Charles III, has been known to oppose the use of plastic wrappings on flowers and has previously asked that the public dispose of such wrappings responsibly.
    queen_dead-55-11-09-2022.jpg
  • Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II at the age of 96 last week, fresh floral tributes are being brought to a temporary memorial garden in Green Park where Royal Parks staff are helped by members of the public, including children, volunteering to remove plastic wrappers from bouquets - plus those left earlier at the gates of Buckingham Palace, in 11th September 2022, in London, England. As a passionate environmentalist, the new monarch, King Charles III, has been known to oppose the use of plastic wrappings on flowers and has previously asked that the public dispose of such wrappings responsibly.
    queen_dead-53-11-09-2022.jpg
  • Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II at the age of 96 last week, fresh floral tributes are being brought to a temporary memorial garden in Green Park where Royal Parks staff are helped by members of the public, including children, volunteering to remove plastic wrappers from bouquets - plus those left earlier at the gates of Buckingham Palace, in 11th September 2022, in London, England. As a passionate environmentalist, the new monarch, King Charles III, has been known to oppose the use of plastic wrappings on flowers and has previously asked that the public dispose of such wrappings responsibly.
    queen_dead-51-11-09-2022.jpg
  • Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II at the age of 96 last week, fresh floral tributes are being brought to a temporary memorial garden in Green Park where Royal Parks staff are helped by members of the public, including children, volunteering to remove plastic wrappers from bouquets - plus those left earlier at the gates of Buckingham Palace, in 11th September 2022, in London, England. As a passionate environmentalist, the new monarch, King Charles III, has been known to oppose the use of plastic wrappings on flowers and has previously asked that the public dispose of such wrappings responsibly.
    queen_dead-49-11-09-2022.jpg
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