View allAll Photos Tagged queueing
Sunday evening, just over 2 hours until doors open, and the queue for James Marriott at The Roundhouse stretches all the way down Chalk Farm Road past Camden Market. My Daughter (who's in one of the photos!) was close to the front and said it was well worth the wait!
Queueing up on Pond Street for groceries in the shop further down the hill having to keep roughly about 3 foot apart from each other due to the Coronavirus precautions.
This is what happens when, during Cowes Week, the only bus on route 1 to turn up in the space of 50 minutes (on a service running every 7/8 minutes and with duplicates for Cowes Week) was one MPD - which didn't have much impact on the massive queue!
... at Brussels Airport.
All the African flights are checked in at the same row of counters -- and so, most of the passengers are African, and the atmosphere is cheerful and lively from the far end of the queue all the way to the counter. Here, two ladies were in animated conversation across the dividing line snaking the long queue.
two months a go I figured out that my driving license has actually expired since last October hahaha. and this is a sketch while I queued for the renewing. it was the police's van in which the whole renewing things were proceed.
Monmouth Coffee
Park Street, SE1
actually standing on Stoney Street Opposite Borough Market.
Cropped photo of the original in the next slide. Great people watching.
Boarded up businesses and a look around the West End/W. 7th area of Saint Paul after a couple nights of civil unrest. This stemmed from multiple protests in response to the death of Mr. George Floyd while being arrested by Minneapolis Police.
Life goes on, here the ALDI at Sibley Plaza is busy with shoppers. Since the store is at capacity (for social distancing) there is a steady line of a dozen or so shoppers queued on the sidewalk outside waiting to enter. The storefront itself is still boarded up to protect the windows, in case any ill willed folks come by after closing.
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Please do not use this photo or any part of this photo without first asking for permission, thank you.
The most disastrous aspect of living in Dhaka is the transportation system. Lack of pubic transport is the main issue, and people literally have to fight their way to get into a bus.
This queue is actually a rare scene. What actually happens is intense push-pull in front of the bus entrance...
it took us almost an hour in the runway waiting for clearance to fly. alas when i looked at the window, i already saw a queue of planes waiting like us.
The well publicised penned-in waiting area in University Road. From this point, the queue was monitiored and controlled by security staff.
Bristol Museum's, Banksy Exhibition, September 2009.
A kilometer away on a football pitch, Solidarités had been registering about a thousand newly arrived people since 08h00.
A broad mix of people were waiting patiently and good humouredly in the rain to collect their tokens entitling them to plastic sheeting, cooking sets, blankets and food that would be handed out a couple of days later.
Stressed people queue for a cinema they are never going to get in to. If only they could have seen the light.
Sushi-dai, one of the most popular sushi joints at Tsukiji, Japan always has a long queue to get into their restaurant. Here's the some of the people waiting in queue, with my wife smiling.
M8 + Nokton 35/1,4
Another bread queue, you might think it is war time years but it can't be for this shot is on Agfa film which was made in Germany and I was only 8 when it ended and hadn't been allowed to touch a camera then, there's also a Volkswagen in the picture and at that time that plant was busy manufacturing scout cars for the German army. The answer is it was taken in 1976 and was due to a bakery strike. (This decade was notorious for the number of strikes in all industries) Incidentally bread wasn't rationed during the war but was put on the ration not long after.