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Hatton Wall, London EC1. Leather Lane market is at the end of the street.
Sony A7 + Canon FD 55mm f/1.2 Aspherical
No 23 - Street Trader Hout Bay, selling trinkets
Mark Daniel has asserted his right to be identified as the author of this work in accordance with the Copyright, Designs & Patents Act 1988
NC Thames Trader still working in 1983 finds the road blocked by a load of Greenhall common protesters
National Naval Aviation Museum
Naval Air Station Pensacola
Pensacola, Florida
Nov 2019
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Photo by Ricoh GXR A12 28mm f2.5 in Niah National Park, The Traders Cave, Entrance of the Niah Caves.
St Nicholas market Bristol
Traders originally set up their market stalls in High Street and Broad Street. However, according to the 18th century historian Barrett, these stalls became the cause of 'great obstruction of passengers and general inconvenience of the inhabitants.'
In preparation for the building of the Exchange in Corn Street, several old houses were pulled down. There was enough space left over for the construction of St Nicholas Market in 1743 as a way of solving the problem.
Barrett concludes, 'the city was made also thereby much more airy, pleasant and healthful.'
Elar Trader - IMO 9409534
Bulk Carrier
Flag: Bahamas
Built: 2010
Length: 190 m
Beam: 28.5 m
Gross tonnage: 24099
DWT: 37782
At the Tate & Lyle Thames Refinery, Silvertown.
5.7.24.
This location is the first store of the Trader Horn chain. In 1958, Warehouse Sales took over this former feed store. In the 1970s, Warehouse Sales rebranded as Trader Horn and branched out into a small regional discount store chain. In the 2000s, the Trader Horn chain started shrinking. In May 2016, the last seven remaining Trader Horn stores were closed.
This store seemed like it was out in the middle of nowhere to me. Also, it was a lot smaller than the other Trader Horn I went to in Ellwood City. This store was only a few aisles wide but went back pretty far.
Trader Horn - US 422 and Dick Road - Prospect, Pennsylvania
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He'll trade you three of his detonators for one of yours...
Ok, maybe that doesn't work, but I liked the idea of a Hondo homage to the jungle's top salesman.
One of several Trader NC's seen during the spring of 2014 delivering to a Potato processing plant in the east of Cyprus.
Container ship Choapa Trader sailing down Gravesend Reach on the River Thames: the base of the former Shornemead Lighthouse, now used by cormorants to preen and relax (and watch the river flow should they want).
Shot 17 May 2015 and uploaded 6 May 2022, when Choapa Trader is sailing as GSL Kithira and heading to the Panama Canal from Shanghai.
Far East trading airship. Deals in medicinal herbs and rare plants, rare alcohol and liquor, fish and sea life, and apothecary services. Slow, but rugged and capable.
A Manchester City Police officer accosts a newspaper seller who appears to be entering a public house on Booth Street.
The image is from a set of glass slides that are dated 1910 The image is titled ‘Child Trader Supervision.’
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From the collection of Greater Manchester Police Museum.
To find out more about Greater Manchester Police please visit
You should call 101, the national non-emergency number, to report crime and other concerns that do not require an emergency response.
Always call 999 in an emergency, such as when a crime is in progress, violence is being used or threatened or where there is danger to life.
You can also call anonymously with information about crime to Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.
Crimestoppers is an independent charity who will not want your name, just your information. Your call will not be traced or recorded and you do not have to go to court or give a statement.
Camera: Olympus OM-1
Lense: om-system f.zuiko auto-s 1:1.8 f=50mm
Film: Ilford HP5 plus 400
Develop: Photography @ Studio8 IIford DD-X (1+4)
Scan: Wolverine
On a really quiet morning, Petroleum Trader has crossed upper New York Bay and has entered the strait Kill van Kull, which connects NY Bay with Newark Bay. The tug is the Normandy. In the background can be seen Jersey City, NJ (left), Manhattan (center), and Brooklyn (right). Shot from St. George, Staten Island. It was so quiet that morning that when the 9:30 ferry from Staten Island to Manhattan sounded its horn as it pulled out of the ferry terminal, from across the bay, you could hear the 9:30 ferry to Staten Island sounding its horn as it pulled out of the Manhattan ferry terminal.
This is what remains of the MV Irish Trader which ran aground at Baltray in 1974.
It has been well photographed by other photographers countless times before but I used a zone plate here to help provide the 'ghost-ship' impression which I always feel whenever I visit it.
Hasselblad with 75mm zone plate (pinhole)