A pensioner who calls himself Britain's 'dullest man' has spent a decade taking photographs of over 100 prisons so he can create a lag-friendly calendar.
Kevin Beresford, from Birmingham, West Midlands, says he can't get enough of the mundane things in life – and is unmoved by those who call him boring.
He calls himself the "most boring man in Britain" and has also put together calendars featuring car parks and roundabouts.
Kevin has even put together a calendar for 2022 using the snaps he has taken over the past 10 years.
But he refuses to include Bank Holidays as he doesn't want to upset inmates.
The 69-year-old was intrigued by prisons due to their structures and by the notorious history that is written within the walls of the buildings.
Now he wants to brighten up the day of those inside.


He said: "I decided to have no Bank Holidays in my calendar so that prisoners wouldn't be too dismayed if they decided to purchase my calendar as I'm sure Bank Holidays don't really exist when you're an inmate.
"I also thought it wouldn't be fair to law enforcement workers inside of the prisons because they have to work through a lot of the Bank Holidays as if they are normal working days.
"So I just thought it'd be best to just not include them to be on the safe side.
"You never know who could buy this calendar, it could be the inmates and people who work in these prisons."

Kevin likes to capture the slices of English life that people are not usually bothered about and he thought prisons were a perfect example of this.
He says that artists, like Tracey Emin and Andy Warhol, focus on the mundane things around them and that he also likes to focus on such things.
Kevin added: "I am also really fascinated by mundane things, I like to focus on this that people wouldn't usually think twice about.
"I was really drawn in by prisons because of their interesting structures and all of the history and stories within the buildings.

"Some of them are amazing Victorian structures. Dartmoor prison is even from the Napoleonic times which was built to house French prisoners.
"The variation is just incredible.
"Leicester prison looks like a castle. The architecture is so impressive.
"They are really interesting places, and after researching each one I could write a book about each individual prison."

He says his favourite prison is HMP Wormwood Scrubs, London, because it has appeared in many TV shows and films, as well as being one of the most attractive he has seen.
But he added: "My least favourite is HMP Dartmoor. In my opinion, it is long past its sell-by date. It looks very small and claustrophobic.
"It doesn't seem fit for purpose now with small cells and cramped conditions. The old scary entrance would freak anybody out too.
"Prisons are really daunting places with high walls, barbed wire and lots of security. The sheer size of them is just incredible.
"This project has taught me to be well behaved because I would never want to end up on the other side of the huge walls.
"I've also had to be quite careful when photographing these places. I have ended up in a tug of war with some prison officers over my camera as they didn't want me to be taking the picture from the outside."