Full-length studio portrait of a soldier displaying a wound stripe, two good conduct stripes and possibly four overseas service chevrons along with a medal ribbon.
A wedding couple, presumably photographed outside the bride's house. The groom is in military uniform. The three pips on his shoulder suggesting he is a Captain. His cap badge, a lion standing on a crown, is either that of a Staff Officer or the Royal First Devon Yeomanry. He is also wearing his WW1 medal ribbons indicating that the photograph post dates September 1919 when the last of the three WW1 Victory medals was awarded.
Nine British officers and a Canadian soldier photographed on a lawn in front of a brick building. Most of the officers are in the Royal Army Medical Corps. Many are wearing medal ribbons suggesting the photo dates from shortly after the end of hostilities.
Half-length studio portrait of a soldier in the Royal Field Artillery posed so as to display his wound stripe, overseas service chevrons, signallers skill at arms badge and Victory Medal ribbon.
Half-length portrait of a Sergeant in the Inniskilling Fusiliers sitting on a window ledge. As the sitter has three overseas service stripes the photo can be dated to c.1918
Full-length portrait of a warrant officer class II (denoted by the Tudor crown, lower left sleeve ) and three overseas service chevrons. His collar badge appears to include the numeral '8' in the pattern suggesting that he is a member of the Canadian 8th Battalion (Winnipeg Rifles).
Full-length portrait of a soldier whose uniform displays three good conduct stripes, one wound stripe and four overseas service chevrons along with an unidentified medal ribbon
Half-length portrait of a private in the Royal Field Artillery with three overseas service chevrons, a wound stripe, good conduct stripe and medal ribbon, possibly a 1914/15 star.
Half-length portrait of a soldier in the 7th (City of London) Battalion London Regiment, identifiable by his distinctive cap badge. He is also displaying a wound stripe on his left sleeve and two overseas service chevrons on his right. 'Nov1918' has been scratched onto the negative.
Group photo of twenty-one German prisoners of war and a Sergeant in a Fusilier Regiment. The Sergeant is wearing three overseas service chevrons on his right sleeve. The photograph has been taken in front of a large house with a gravel drive. At least one of the prisoners was a sailor in the Imperial German Navy, the 'Kaiserliche Marine.'
Studio portrait of a veteran with facial scarring wearing his Silver War Badge. The Badge was awarded to all of those military personnel who had served at home or overseas during the war, and who had been discharged from the army under King’s Regulations, ie . no longer physically fit for war service or were surplus to military requirements having suffered impairment since entry into the service.
Studio portrait of two male civilians standing behind three seated soldiers. Two of the soldiers are Royal Welsh Fusiliers, the third from an unidentified regiment. One of the fusiliers has two wound stripes and a marksman's skill at arms badge on his sleeve. The soldier from an unidentified regiment has three overseas service chevrons on his sleeve. These were created in December 1917, therefore the photo dates from 1918 or later.
Studio portrait of a soldier in the Canadian Expeditionary Force. He wears three overseas service chevrons denoting three years overseas service . Above these is a Tudor crown denoting his rank as a Warrant Officer Class II.
A half-length portrait of a private in the Royal Welsh Fusiliers. He is seated on a chair with the chair back to the camera. His arms are crossed in front of him and resting on the chair back to display his two wound stripes and three overseas service chevrons. He also wears a medal ribbon, possibly the 1914/15 star.
Half-length studio portrait of a Lance Corporal in the Royal Warwickshire Regiment. He has two wound stripes on his left sleeve, five overseas service chevrons and a Military Medal ribbon.
Studio portrait of an officer (rank unclear) in the Royal Engineers sporting a wound stripe photographed with two young ladies, possibly his daughters.