HOOVER and corset shops in Bradford from the 1970s and 80s have been recalled by a photographer.
Ian Beesley has shared his striking black and white images of a number of bygone shops from more than 40 years ago.
Included in Eccleshill-born Mr Beesley's latest collection are a corner shop in Eccleshill with a painted sign 'Good as Knew. We Buy Owt' on its front.
A barbers shop in Thornton Road is remembered which features a series of profile photos of men in its window, displaying some of the possible haircuts customers may wish to opt for.
A Sunbridge Road photo store is featured, with the shop front sign 'Dealers in Photographic Materials and Pure Chemicals'.
Frederick Conway's photo studio in Carlisle Road, Bradford, is also captured with billboards for the Labour Party and beer on the side of it.
A collection of Bollywood movie posters in the shop window in Whetley Hill are also included.
Darvell's Pets and Supermarket, in Four Lane Ends, features a gathering outside the shopfront to mark then shop owner Kenneth Darvill's birthday. Mr Beesley says it is the only shop featured in these photographs that is still running.
'Wanted: Dead or Alive Vacs' is the sign outside Greenhows of Leeds' Hoover repair shop sign in Bradford.
A sewing machine repair shop and a store in Canal Road where you can buy a suit for £4.50 also feature.
Ladies were catered for at a corset shop in Laisterdyke, as were workers at Industrial Trade Footwear - The Work Boot Specialists in Thornton Road.
Beesley said: "Even at the time, the shops I took pictures of were from a totally different era.
"I think there is only one of the shops that is still going and that's Darvill's Pets and Supermarket. It was one of the last true Bradfordian businesses still going.
In the 70s and 80s in Bradford, there were a lot of small family-run businesses doing all sorts of things. A lot of the things they were selling fell out of favour
"Frederick Conway had one of the shops. He was the official school photographer for Bradford. He took my picture when I was six at Ravenscliffe Infants School.
"The posters above the barbers shop has a man holding a packet of Victory V cough lozenges."
Who is Ian Beesley?
He was born in Bradford in 1954 and after leaving school in 1972 worked in a mill, a foundry before going to work at Esholt Sewage works, where he was part of the railway gang.
Encouraged by his workmates to go to college and find a career, he took up photography and eventually was accepted to study at Bradford Art College, after which he went to Bournemouth & Poole College of Art.
On graduating he was awarded a Kodak Scholarship for Social Documentation and started to document the demise of industry particularly in Bradford and West Yorkshire.
His work is held in the collections of Bradford City Art galleries and museums, the National Media Museum, the Imperial War Museum, the Royal Photographic Society, the V & A London, the National Coal Mining Museum for England and The Smithsonian Museum Washington USA. He has published 40 books.
In 2012 he was made an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Photographic Society and in 2019 he was awarded an Honorary Doctorate by the University of Bradford for his outstanding contribution to the art and culture and the social and economic development of the city of Bradford.
He is currently artist in residence for the Bradford Institute for Health Research, Gallery Oldham and Yorkshire Water.
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