Studio portrait of two soldiers, both with the same tactical recognition patches and artificer trade badges. The soldier on the right is photographed on another negative (DCH Mil 791) which appears to record his name as "Richards, Caio Arms."
Half-length portrait of a Sergeant in the Military Police. As the caption is not on the negative it appear that this is a copy of an older photograph, possibly a postcard.
Full-length portrait of a lance corporal. Above his stripe is a patch bearing the letter 'R' above a wreath. This is believed to be a skill at arms badge for a range taker.
A second Lieutenant in the Tank Regiment with three overseas service chevrons and four medals. Of the medals l-r British War Medal, Allied Victory Medal and what appear to be two Army Long Service and Good Conduct medals, one bearing the profile of King Edward VII, the other George V. The sitter is sitting in a doorway, not a photographic studio.
Half-length studio portrait of a soldier in the RAMC, identifiable by his cap and collar badges. He is also wearing a plain medal ribbon and the Royal Coat of Arms on his left sleeve. The medal ribbon is possibly that of the Army Long Service and Good Conduct Medal.
Head and shoulders portrait of a sergeant, with what appears to be a division patch above his sergeants stripes. The motif on the division patch appears to be a crown.
Full-length portrait of a soldier whose uniform displays three good conduct stripes, one wound stripe and four overseas service chevrons along with an unidentified medal ribbon
Studio portrait of a soldier in the Canadian Expeditionary Force. He wears three overseas service chevrons denoting three years overseas service . Above these is a Tudor crown denoting his rank as a Warrant Officer Class II.
Three quarter length portrait of a veteran soldier in the Pembroke Yeomanry with six proficiency stars and other insignia on his right sleeve. The four chevrons point upwards on his lower sleeve and the eight pointed star above the proficiency stars denote his rank as Regimental Quartermaster Sergeant.
Studio portrait of three soldiers from - left to right - Machine Gun Corps, Royal Field Artillery, Royal Garrison Artillery. The latter two are identifiable by their shoulder titles.