Life continues in a pandemic lockdown. This vendor waits on a sidewalk to sell his commodity while seated on a tricycle for which a driver (not pictured) also waits for a passenger.
The barbershop is an interesting locale. Many things happen at the same time: waiting customers, a diligent barber, a patient kid surveying everything reflected in the mirror, and a bored mother.
Different varieties of local longganisa (sausages) hang in a specific section of the Baguio public market. One can tell the difference by their colours alone.
This bus conductor never hands out paper tickets but only lists fare payment on a folded sheet of paper. Such display of honesty is in the psyche of the Cordilleran people.
Under the a subdued glare of a clouded sun several storeys high, these workers complete the condominium exterior. Do they even think of owning a unit in the condominium they are constructing?
Draped in blanket, the client comfortably holds a mirror to check how his barber is making progress . . . literally under the sun and beside a city creek.
Vendors have conquered and claimed the passageway as their own, selling goods that might attract pedestrians and commuters. And at night after the rush hour, everything seems relaxed.