King and Queen visit Banbridge on final day of NI tour

King Charles III and Queen Camilla have visited Banbridge, County Down, for their third and final day of engagements in Northern Ireland.
Hundreds of people gathered in the streets holding bouquets and waved flags as the Royal couple arrived.
The pair shook hands with members of the public, accepted gifts and flowers, and also petted a few dogs beside some delighted owners.
The King met with local business representatives at Banbridge Old Town Hall, while Queen Camilla visited the town's library.

King Charles mingled with community representatives and creative industries, including some of those involved with the Game of Thrones experience.
The HBO series was mostly filmed in locations across Northern Ireland, including Titanic Studios, Belfast, and Linen Mills Studios in Banbridge.
Staff from Southern Regional College and Total Hockey also attended the reception in the venue, which is home to a recently opened Community Advice Centre.

Queen Camilla visited Banbridge Library, which has been a vital resource and learning hub for the people of Banbridge since 1979.
During the visit, she observed a book reading involving a number of local schoolchildren and discussed the books they enjoyed reading.
Queen Camilla then joined a craft and chatter group to hear about their projects and how groups like this support the local community and reduce loneliness.
She was then invited to cut a cake made by a local bakery before the couple departed.

Among those the couple met was Sheila Livingston.
"It is so exciting, it is brilliant. We never thought we would see it in our town," she told BBC News NI.
"I'd seen the Duke of Edinburgh before when my daughter was getting her Duke of Edinburgh award so it's brilliant seeing them."

For the Banbridge and Lisburn Ukulele Group it was a chance to play King Charles some of his favourite songs.
"This is absolutely the biggest gig we've had and we are really honoured to have been invited to play here," Kate Scott from the group said.
"I put the set list together. It has all the hit songs that we like to do, but we also checked out that His Royal Highness has a playlist that he released recently so we knew Locomotion and My Boy Lollipop were on that list so we performed them as well."

Elaine Whitten from Hamiltonsbawn was also among the crowd and she had a front row position to meet the royal couple.
"I got over here in half an hour," she said. "My sister called me and said 'are you not coming over to see the King?' I said I've things to do but she said 'come on' and I flew over."

Stefania Burns is originally from Lake Garda in Italy but now calls Banbridge home.
She was an early arrival on Friday morning to make sure she saw the royal visitors.
"I got here at half nine and got a place on the front row. I wanted a good place. There aren't many Italians in Banbridge who can say they met the King so I am very proud," she said.
During their visit, Queen Camilla and King Charles learnt about some of the history of the County Down town and were briefed on its famous bridge built in 1835.
The visit to Banbridge concludes a three-day visit to Northern Ireland, which saw King Charles briefed on research into cancer therapies at the Ulster University campus in Coleraine, while Queen Camilla took part in a cookery demonstration at a farm near Limavady with celebrity chef Paula McIntyre.
The monarchs met farmers, artists, acrobats and sea shanty singers during the visit, as well as Northern Ireland Secretary of State Hilary Benn, First Minister Michelle O'Neill and deputy First Minister Emma Little-Pengelly.