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The guy without the rubber pants: army trousers and Dunlop rubber boots. Putting on the bomber jacket.
Workers are collecting soil from the river Ganges. This soil is used in various work including idol making !!!
Steel workers outside MANA, Hamilton where they have been locked out for nearly four years.Shot on Tri-X 400 and developed in Blazinal for 17.5 minutes at 18 degrees Celsius.
The 100 Workers memorial, aka WSIB (Workplace Safety and Insurance Board) Simcoe Park Workers Monument. A monument commemorating the workers of Ontario who died in the workplace, by John Scott and Stewart H. Pollock.
Within a few days the new pavement already need some repair. Luckily, 2 road workers were available in short term.
Tai O Village, Hong Kong
My Hong Kong photos where shot with AGFAPhoto Vista Plus ISO 200 35mm film on a CANON AF35ML from the eighties. All digital copies were made by Cardinal Camera with very small edits made in Lightroom
During our visit at this plant we bumped in a mass rally for the workes of the factory. A seldome chance to capture some good shots of it during loud barking megaphones and orchestra music. Some people there were quiet confused with our appearance.
DPRK, Hungnam, Oct. 2015
beside male workers Bangladeshi females are contribute for the development of the nation through their hard labor. unfortunately still they are paid half than a male worker in many field works.
captured from Sunamganj, Bangladesh
shot this image in copper market with my friend Tawheed alrahman , and this is one of the old markets where is famous for manufacturing household utensils, tea pots and cups, spoons .
تم تصوير هذه الصورة مع الاخ توحيد الرحمن في زيارة لسوق الصفافير في الكويت
ترجع تسميته بهذا الاسم نسبة للصفر (النحاس) حيث يشتهر هذا السوق بصناعة الأواني المنزلية وأباريق الشاي والكاسات والملاعق وإطارات الصور والفوانيس النحاسية والنقش عليها. ويعتبر من الاسواق القديمة
From 'Street Life in London', 1877, by John Thomson and Adolphe Smith.
“…The" wall working" or fence working, described by Parker as a " fine property," is a system of cheap advertising. Where a portion of a wall or fence, near some public thoroughfare, can be rented or obtained gratuitously, it is covered with an array of boards, which are hung up in the morning and taken in at night. In this instance, the boards covered with thin bills are supplied to Cannon [seated on the right], who hangs them up in the morning and receives about a shilling weekly for each board. But the number of boards afford no clue to the income derived from this mode of advertising, as an indefinite number of dummies are displayed to fill up vacant spaces. The dummies are carefully selected; the advertisements they carry must be as imposing as the names of their owners are respectable. Cannon assured me that it required tact and experience to manage this sort of property. Unfortunately the dummies have been dominant of late, owing to depression in all departments of trade. The result is that the" wall worker's " property produces a return so poor as hardly to repay the pains bestowed on its management.”
For the full story, and other photographs and commentaries, follow this link and click through to the PDF file at the bottom of the description