<span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-uat="{KerningValue:ODA=}">A</span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">nil Shill named his barber shop Black House Hairdressing Saloon because when he arrived in Abu Dhabi from Bangladesh in 1978, Electra Street was dark. When he opened Black House in 1992, the first thing he did was hang a portrait of the country's Founding President, Sheikh Zayed. This was not because it was </span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">fashionable, but because Shill saw it as a fitting tribute to both the development that lit up Electra Street, and the 13 years he had served in the UAE Armed Forces.</span> <span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">Whenever Shill, 61, wants to get a new portrait, he heads to the framers of Electra Street. Their work hangs unnoticed in hundreds of homes and offices across the country. </span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="-14.000000000000002">"All people know that framing and glass is on Electra," explains Mostafa Nader Nadderi, </span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="-14.000000000000002">who opened</span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="-14.000000000000002"> Al Ain Frames in 1979. "</span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="-14.000000000000002"> Hamdan Street was for dress, Electra Street was for frames.</span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">"</span> <span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]">The 70-year-old </span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]">is one of the frame makers who have been on Electra street since the mid-1970s, most of whom came from Iran more than 50 years ago as teenagers. Nadderi came on a baqara ship in 1963 at the age of 15, earning a rupee a day with room and board at his first job in Dubai.</span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]"> </span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]">He saved enough to open his own shop in Al Ain before shifting to Electra Street. In those years following the country's 1971 unification, placing royal portraits on office</span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]"> walls quickly became a national habit.</span> <span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">Name a business in the capital, and Nadderi will tell you the work he's done there.</span><br/> <span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">He </span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">says he's framed more than 5,000 images of the royal family.</span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6"> Recently, he gave one government department a quotation for 3,000 frames</span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6"> – 1,000 for Sheikh Zayed, 1,000 for </span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">Sheikh Khalifa, President of the UAE, and 1,000 for Sheikh Mohammed </span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">bin Zayed, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces.</span> <span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">Nadderi offers 47 different photos of the rulers. He acquired these from various sources – </span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">from stationary stores to rare photographs bought from</span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-fs="NormalItalic" data-atex-track="6"><em> Al Ittihad</em></span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6"> newspaper. Customers can choose from this collection to get their framed photo. </span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">The most expensive photo he bought is a Dh700 </span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">portrait of the royal family</span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6"> at a majlis. One copy can be seen at a biryani restaurant around the corner.</span> <span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">The framer has photos of his most popular subjects in various settings </span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6"> – from Sheikh Zayed riding a white stallion, to a collage </span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">that includes the Founding President </span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">bowling. </span> <span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">Styles change. A photo of Sheikh Zayed in aviators was favoured in the late 1990s. Today's best-seller is a composite of Sheikh Zayed, Sheikh Khalifa and Sheikh Mohammed against a red backdrop. </span> <span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">Ornate wooden frames painted golden became popular from the 1980s. By the late 1990s, gold was indispensable. Nadderi has only one rule: composites are for homes, offices should carry sets.</span> <span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">The craftsmen take their work seriously, seeing themselves as custodians of a more communal time. </span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">The framer first met Sheikh Zayed as a young man fitting glass at Al Masoudi tower in 1965. "Baba Zayed was sitting on the sand drinking coffee: 'Come, come', he said to me." </span> <span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">Later, Nadd</span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">eri and his wife were offered citizenship as Sheikh Zayed pushed to establish a settled population in towns like Mirfa and Liwa in the Western Region. "Before Baba Zayed said to my wife and I, 'go to Mirfa, stay there with your family and you'll get passports',</span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6"> "</span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">my wife said, 'Mirfa is very far. So very far'." They stayed in Abu Dhabi.</span> <span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">Nadderi's stories are not unique. Mohammed Yousef, 70, was the first framer on Electra Street when he opened Gulf Glass & Framing in 1975. </span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6"> </span> <br/> <span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">"Anybody in UAE from a church, he knows him," says Kamel Boules, who volunteers </span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">at Abu Dhabi's Saint Antonius Cathedral </span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">. "He's a gentleman for everyone."</span> <span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">Boules had come to </span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">Yousef to reframe a picture of St Antonius</span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6"> . </span> <span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">At Black House Hairdressing Saloon, everyone has a theory as to how hanging a royal portrait became a custom.</span> <span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">"It started in Saudi Arabia in the 1920s with King Abdulaziz, the first one," says</span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6"> Habib Harb, 58, from Lebanon, twisting his moustache into place."Egypt," came a voice from behind him, "A lot of people in Egypt put up pictures of [former prime minister] Saad Zaghloul."</span> <span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">The voice belonged to a regular from Egypt who had come for a shave. </span><span data-atex-cstyle="$ID/[No character style]" data-atex-track="6">"But here," he continued, "A man puts up pictures because he loves Zayed. Here he has a background in loving from the heart." </span>