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There were banners, there were loudhailers, there were marching songs, but this wasn't a protest. The police were nowhere to be seen. This was a cheerful, untroubled, hopeful ambience. Flowers and laughter. This was the Wilding Festival, a celebration of the suffragette movement and the 100th-year anniversary of the death of militant activist Emily Wilding Davison - the woman who lost her life after throwing herself in front of the king's horse at the Epsom Derby to draw attention to the cause. A group of modern-day suffragettes had assembled on

I had just placed my order at Nandos and returned to my table when I saw this man on a bench with an irresistibly cute schnauzer just outside the restaurant's glass doors. I mulled for but a moment, uttered to my sister a single word, "Tempted!" and she shoved my bag at me. To charge straight at them through the doors wielding a camera would be to start on the wrong foot, so to speak, so I circled around the concourse before returning meekly to the spot. I introduced myself

I took a little detour today while on a grocery run, thinking that I'd dip into the garden square itself for some random street photography. Seeing how nice the weather's been lately, I thought I'd add a splash of colour into the mix. While fiddling with my camera settings - I had just taken the camera out of my bag - I ran into a hobo, his shirt unbuttoned halfway down, and sneaked a shot. He then came up real close (too close!) and went, "Oh you'd like a photo

How it all began In 2006, a photographer friend asked me along to the 'No More Fallujahs' peace camp at Parliament Square, where anti-war campaigners were demanding an end to the UK/US military occupation of Iraq. It sounded exciting. It was all new ground to me, photographically and otherwise. I was tempted, but hesitant. Coming from a country that has near-zero tolerance for dissent, and where a gathering of more than five persons could potentially be considered an illegal assembly, my nervousness then was understandable: But we're not the press! Is