All content © Linda Krakow Eaman
The Evening Standard "vendors" (the paper is free, but they hand it out) are everywhere... standing still as the city rushes past.
This is the other end of the Millennium bridge, facing the Tate Modern. A street performer stands immobile at the end.
This man handed out the Evening Standard, a free daily newspaper, outside the Moorgate subway station every day.
Stepney Green is in London's East End, one of the poorer areas of the city. No tourists here, just a steady stream of everyday people going about their business.
In Trafalgar Square, in front of the National Gallery, there are always buskers and artists trying to make a buck. But this guy (with the beard), whose display was a poem written out with pennies (I can't remember what it said), just wanted to talk. And these people were clearly happy to oblige.
Self portrait at the building known as the Gherkin.
A moment in time, at Liverpool Street Station
In Shoreditch
Liverpool Street Station
Weekends in Brick Lane
The royal family seems to be enjoying the busker's music!
King's Cross train station
This is the new London. The corner of Moor Lane and Ropemaker Street, an area destroyed in the Blitz.
The Hungerford and Jubilee Bridges
Everywhere you look, there's construction. I once stood at the top of a 17 storey building with a 180 degree view, and counted 75 cranes.
There's a whole world under viaducts.
Spitalfields. On a sunny day, the whole city seems to be outdoors at lunch time.