These are photographs of the manuscripts of French letters by Queen Elizabeth I of England, held by the National Library of Russia (NLR) in Saint Petersburg. There are twenty-four letters, and they belong to the Dubrovsky collection. The shelfmark of the manuscript volume is Fr. F. v. XIV No. 6. These images were taken by the NLR, and rights for their publication were granted to the Research Unit for Variation, Contacts and Change in English (VARIENG) at the University of Helsinki, Finland. This release accompanies an online edition of the letters of Queen Elizabeth I in NLR, Fr. F. v. XIV No. 6. The letters were edited by Guillaume Coatalen, and the images were edited to be IIIF-compliant by Samuli Kaislaniemi. The full reference of the edition, one part of which is a gallery of these images using an IIIF image viewer, is: Coatalen, Guillaume & Samuli Kaislaniemi (eds). 2021. Queen Elizabeth I's French Letters in the National Library of Russia (Studies in Variation, Contacts and Change in English 21). Helsinki: VARIENG. https://varieng.helsinki.fi/series/volumes/21/ All the images are released under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International license. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ There are 57 images in total, which come in two formats: the original TIFF files, and converted JPG images of the same resolution. As the TIFF files are so large, the JPGs were created to be used in the online edition in order to reduce the use of server space and bandwidth. The images have been bundled into zip files. The image names follow the numbering of the letters in the edition (Coatalen & Kaislaniemi). These numbers differ from archival itemisation: in the manuscript volume, the letters have been pencilled with numbers 3–26. These archival item numbers have also been included in the image names. For example, the first image is named, "Letter 01 - No 3 - fol.1r". "Letter 1" is the number of the letter in the edition; "No 3" is the archival item number; and "fol.1r" means the image is of the recto of the first leaf of the manuscript letter.