In early March, STV launched a search to find the people who featured in a book documenting a day in the life of ordinary Glaswegians.

The book, Glasgow: 24 Hours in the Life of a City, was the culmination of a 24-hour project by 33 of the world's top photojournalists to capture an ordinary day in the west of Scotland.

On March 28, 1990, the team ventured out, some riding the night bus with the early morning revellers while others headed to hospitals, schools and the docks.

By midnight, they had taken 40,000 images of everyday life in Glasgow.

To mark the anniversary of that day we managed to track down some of the Glasgow residents who appeared in the book, some as far away as Colorado and Thailand, to see where they are now and catch up on what they remember of that day.

"I remember the day the photographer came round," says 70-year-old Brian Nugent, who now spends his time travelling to north Africa.

"I always used to sit outside the shop and read a book, chatting to everyone who came by. I still have the book I was reading that day, it was The Upper Room by JC Ryle.

"My shop, The Tryst, was right next to the Clutha Bar. I worked there for 29 years until that terrible helicopter tragedy in 2013.

"The vibrations of the crash brought down one of the walls and left it too unsafe to reopen."

"I didn’t even know I was in the book until a few years later when my friend spotted me in it," says 46-year-old Tanya Hamilton, who still lives in Glasgow.

"I knew there was a photographer in Yorkhill that day taking my picture but I had no idea why. I left nursing a few years after the picture was taken.

"I can remember that wee boy really well though. I’m sure he had eczema. He used to scratch so much we had to bandage him up. I was playing with him at the time that picture was taken, I remember us laughing.

"That book was amazing. I think everybody who was in it was proud to be in it."

"My friend just sent me a screenshot of a tweet from STV looking to find people that were featured in the book," says George Graham.

"I am the boy with the hamster! I remember the day so well. The picture of me crops up every couple of years and is such a good memory. I'm now a a kindergarten teacher in Thailand.

"Oh, and I don't have a hamster any more, the hamster in the picture actually killed itself by jumping into the class aquarium the following summer! I'm still an animal lover though and I have a few rescue dogs that I have saved in Thailand."

"That photo appears every now and then and it's always so embarrassing," says Dawn Hutchison, who was one of the first babies to be born by C-section at Rottenrow hospital that day.

"Everyone else has their clothes on in the book except me!" she jokes.

"My mother has that book and all the newspaper clippings from that time. I'm now a single mother to my son, Josh, and I work as a chef in the city."

"That was me in the music room," says Joseph Beaver, who has gone back to further education.

"I'm still in touch with my classmates from back then, we went to Holyrood Secondary School together.

"My friend Pauline is in there having her hair raised by a Van de Graaff generator and my neighbour's daughter is featured in the book somewhere too.

"I don't think I'd be able to play that instrument any more though!"

"Myself and my friend are in this book, we're the two girls heading home from school at four o'clock," says Gillian Lewis.

"I still have the book, in fact my whole family have a copy. It's great to look back at it sometimes as Glasgow is such an amazing city."

"I understand you're looking for people who featured in the above named book?" says John Quinn
"I am in one of the pictures at the beginning of the book eating a pizza (messily) on the top deck of a bus."

"The young couple in the swimming pool are my wife and I, we married in 1991," says Colin McNair, who lives in Barrhead with Anne and their two children, Alice and Jack.

"Not that we would pose for that picture these days - our children are almost those ages now," he says.

"The book resurfaces every so often to hilarious laughter in the house. We met the year before at the 1988 Garden Festival and we were actually out on a swimming date when this photo was taken.

"We will be celebrating our 25th wedding anniversary this year."

"My sister sent me the STV article and it is great seeing all the photos again," says Gordon Bell.

"I can't believe it has been 26 years. I am on the right in the Howden Engineering photo (actually Clydeport at the Meadowside Granary building).

"I left Glasgow in 1996 and have been living in Colorado for the past 20 years and am now married with a teenage son."

"My husband, Robert, is the man on the left holding the great big spanner," says Mrs Barrett.

"Bobby is now in a care home and suffers from short term memory loss, but his long term memory is still good and he remembers his days working with 'Big Bell' George.

"He loved this photo and had it printed on a big canvas which now hangs on the wall in his room."