Half-plate carte de visite negative containing eight individual portraits of soldiers in the Pembroke Yeomanry. The portraits are in two rows of four arranged 'têtê bêche' style. Due to deterioration only six are in good condition.
Three-quarter length portrait of a sergeant in the South Wales Borderers wearing a greatcoat and holding a stick. Image appears grainy and lacks contrast suggesting this may be a copy of a pre-existing photograph.
Full-length studio portrait of a private in the Royal Army Medical Corps. The style of the portrait suggests it was taken c.1914 rather than towards the end of the war when uniforms had more embellishments.
Three-quarter length studio portrait of a private in the Royal Welsh Fusiliers wearing the 1915 economy Service Dress Jacket - note lack of pleat in breast pockets.
Three-quarter length studio portrait of a sailor in the Royal Navy. The visible portion of his cap band reads "Mine Sweep" indicating he is serving on a Mine Sweeper.
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
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.