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Josephine Price
Community noticeboard at the Women & Children First bookstore.
Trompeta Verde, a collective based in Los Corralones in the Feria neighbourhood.
Reindeer herds are the gravitation point for the traditionally nomadic Sami, who are spread across northern Norway, Sweden and Finland in the multi-national region of Lapland.
Saltfjellet–Svartisen National Park is just inside the Arctic Circle. The topography of this region is diverse, from high mountain and glaciers to alpine meadowland.
The Oskal sisters, Elin (left) and Anne wearing the Gákti, or traditional Sami clothing. Used for both ceremonial purposes and herding, the dress is practical and warm, and was often made from reindeer skin or pelt as well as woollen and ornamental effects.
A gamme, a traditional residence for the Sami. The structure is typically formed of domed wooden shafts then covered in turf or peat moss.
Located near Saltfjellet-Svartisen National Park, the Oskals live amidst birch woodland close to the Arctic circle.
Angel, the reindeer, with the Oskal sisters in Saltfjellet, Norway
Angel, the Oskal family's favourite reindeer, at their homestead in Saltfjellet, Northern Norway
A reindeer in the Arctic Circle. Norwegians believe kissing a moose brings happiness and good luck.