![]() ![]() ![]() Please make sure it is the correct address, or let me know if the shipping address is different than indicated on the receipt. If a package is returned to me because of an incorrect address, I will have to charge for shipping again. I strive to ship all prints purchased on a business day within 24 hours of receiving payment. Occasionally-like if I'm out on a photo trip for a couple days-shipping may take up to three days after payment. If I'm out of my studio for an extended period, I'll announce that in my shop info section. I will send you a confirmation email after your order has been shipped. My prints are sealed inside a plastic sleeve to protect against moisture damage and then put into a rigid cardboard envelope. If you need an item to arrive sooner, I can offer express shipping options at a reasonable cost. Please contact me for details prior to making a purchase. I am not responsible for prints that are lost or damaged during shipping. However, I will replace small orders free of charge. For larger orders and larger prints, items will be replaced only if you purchase an insured shipping option or pay a small fee to cover the additional cost. A package is considered lost if it has not arrived 6 weeks after the shipping date. I ship replacements only after the full six weeks. Larger items that are shipped outside of the United States may incur additional fees, taxes, tarifs, duties, or customs charges. Since I cannot predict or calculate these charges, the buyer is responsible for their payment should they occur. Returns will not be accepted due to customs fees.Tesco, Sainsbury’s, Asda and Morrisons are each offering scores of deals every week on meat products such as burgers and sausages to drive sales and boost their profits, according to a report from the charity Eating Better. It is an umbrella group representing more than 60 organisations including WWF UK, Greenpeace, public health bodies, dietitians, the RSPCA and food charities. The report also discloses that only 1% of the many hundreds of multi-buy offers for meat products examined by researchers will be banned when the government’s crackdown on the promotion of foodstuffs that are high in fat, salt or sugar – to tackle childhood obesity – begins in October. Marketing of such foods will be outlawed on TV before the 9pm “watershed” and also online, though the food industry is trying to persuade ministers to delay or water down both plans. “Supermarkets are bombarding us with Bogof burgers, sausages and cheap chicken of unknown origin, putting profit before population health and that of the planet,” said Simon Billing, Eating Better’s executive director. “The Big Four are contradicting their own commitments by encouraging customers to buy more meat than they would have if it hadn’t been on promotion. Pushing cheap meat into our baskets also supports intensive animal farming, which is wrecking the planet, emitting a huge amount of greenhouse gas and requiring massive amounts of our precious resources, such as land and water.” “The impact of this is that we’re eating more meat than we need, or is good for us. The government-commissioned national food strategy, published last July, said Britons needed to reduce their intake of meat by 30% by 2032 in order to help combat the UK’s “plague of dietary ill-health” and the climate emergency. Such a dramatic fall was “significant and it won’t be easy to achieve” but was vital to help reduce methane emissions from livestock farming and free up land so it could be used to store carbon, it said. ![]()
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