A bollard on Salisbury Street displays posters as part of the 'All Right?' campaign.
A photograph of flags in road cones, as part of the first phase of All Right?'s advertising campaign. Each flag contains a statement beginning with "It's all right".
A photograph of flags being placed in road cones, as part of the first phase of All Right?'s advertising campaign. Each flag contains a statement beginning with "It's all right".
A photograph of All Right? posters pasted onto a Phantom Billstickers board. The posters were part of the first phase of All Right?'s advertising campaign. Each poster contained a statement beginning with "It's all right".
A photograph of All Right? posters pasted onto a Phantom Billstickers board. The posters were part of the first phase of All Right?'s advertising campaign. Each poster contained a statement beginning with "It's all right".
A photograph of All Right? posters pasted onto a Phantom Billstickers board. The posters were part of the first phase of All Right?'s advertising campaign. Each poster contained a statement beginning with "It's all right".
A photograph of All Right? posters pasted onto a Phantom Billstickers board. The posters were part of the first phase of All Right?'s advertising campaign. Each poster contained a statement beginning with "It's all right".
A photograph of a flag in a planter box which reads, "It's all right to feel proud of how we've coped". The flag is part of the All Right wellbeing campaign led by the Canterbury District Health Board and the Mental Health Foundation of New Zealand.
A photograph of a poster on the window of the Earthquake Services building on the corner of Fitzgerald Avenue and Ferry Road. The poster is in the style of Barack Obama's "Hope" campaign poster, and depicts Bryan Staples with the message "Insurance, hope".
A photograph of a flag in a road cone, next to a digger carrying out road works. The flag is part of the first phase of All Right?'s advertising campaign, and reads, "It's all right if you're a tad on edge this morning".
A photograph of a poster and picket signs in the window of the Earthquake Services building on the corner of Fitzgerald Avenue and Ferry Road. The poster depicts Gerry Brownlee in the style of Barack Obama's "Hope" campaign poster, and reads "Democracy nope". The picket signs read "Brownlee: rise, lies and pies" and "Overwrought, overdrawn, over EQC".