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People walk and rest along a tree-lined pedestrian path in a residential neighborhood in Munich, Germany, on April 29, 2025. The landscaped...

#12319013

Housing Shortage And Rising Rents In Germany

30 April 2025

People walk and rest along a tree-lined pedestrian path in a residential neighborhood in Munich, Germany, on April 29, 2025. The landscaped...

#12319013

30 April 2025

People walk and rest along a tree-lined pedestrian path in a residential neighborhood in Munich, Germany, on April 29, 2025. The landscaped public space provides urban greenery and community infrastructure amid the broader backdrop of housing shortages and rising rent levels in German cities.


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People walk along a narrow residential street flanked by parked cars and colorful multi-storey buildings in Munich, Germany, on April 29, 20...

#12319015

Housing Shortage And Rising Rents In Germany

30 April 2025

People walk along a narrow residential street flanked by parked cars and colorful multi-storey buildings in Munich, Germany, on April 29, 20...

#12319015

30 April 2025

People walk along a narrow residential street flanked by parked cars and colorful multi-storey buildings in Munich, Germany, on April 29, 2025. The view illustrates typical urban housing conditions amid ongoing concerns about housing shortages and rising rents in German cities.


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Small groups of people walk along a quiet residential street lined with parked cars and multi-storey housing buildings in Munich, Bavaria, U...

#12319016

Housing Shortage And Rising Rents In Germany

30 April 2025

Small groups of people walk along a quiet residential street lined with parked cars and multi-storey housing buildings in Munich, Bavaria, U...

#12319016

30 April 2025

Small groups of people walk along a quiet residential street lined with parked cars and multi-storey housing buildings in Munich, Bavaria, Upper Bavaria, Germany, on April 29, 2025. The area reflects the typical urban residential structure amid discussions about housing shortages and increasing rent costs in German cities.


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Pedestrians walk along a narrow residential street lined with colorful building facades and parked cars in Munich, Germany, on April 29, 202...

#12319017

Housing Shortage And Rising Rents In Germany

30 April 2025

Pedestrians walk along a narrow residential street lined with colorful building facades and parked cars in Munich, Germany, on April 29, 202...

#12319017

30 April 2025

Pedestrians walk along a narrow residential street lined with colorful building facades and parked cars in Munich, Germany, on April 29, 2025. The neighborhood illustrates typical urban housing conditions amid Germany's broader concerns over housing shortages and increasing rental costs.


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A yellow and green line 4 city bus stops at a central bus stop near the historic Neupfarrplatz square in Regensburg, Upper Palatinate, Bavar...

#12295954

Local Bus Transport In The German City Of Ravensburg

23 April 2025

A yellow and green line 4 city bus stops at a central bus stop near the historic Neupfarrplatz square in Regensburg, Upper Palatinate, Bavar...

#12295954

23 April 2025

A yellow and green line 4 city bus stops at a central bus stop near the historic Neupfarrplatz square in Regensburg, Upper Palatinate, Bavaria, Germany, on April 19, 2025. Passengers board and wait at a shelter beside ornate old town facades under clear daylight conditions.


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A quiet stretch of the Danube shoreline with residential houses, spring greenery, and a view toward the historic Stone Bridge captures the p...

#12290255

Daily Life By The Danube In The German Town Of Regensburg, A UNESCO World Heritage City

21 April 2025

A quiet stretch of the Danube shoreline with residential houses, spring greenery, and a view toward the historic Stone Bridge captures the p...

#12290255

21 April 2025

A quiet stretch of the Danube shoreline with residential houses, spring greenery, and a view toward the historic Stone Bridge captures the peaceful riverside atmosphere in Regensburg, Upper Palatinate, Bavaria, Germany, on April 19, 2025. This scene reflects the calm rhythm of daily life in the UNESCO World Heritage city, blending natural features with historic urban elements.


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People stroll through the historic pedestrian area near Targobank on a sunny spring day, passing under a vine-covered archway in Weiden, Upp...

#12289425

Daily Life In The Bavarian City Of Weiden

21 April 2025

People stroll through the historic pedestrian area near Targobank on a sunny spring day, passing under a vine-covered archway in Weiden, Upp...

#12289425

21 April 2025

People stroll through the historic pedestrian area near Targobank on a sunny spring day, passing under a vine-covered archway in Weiden, Upper Palatinate, Bavaria, Germany, on April 20, 2025. The street features outdoor cafes, small shops, and modern stores blending with traditional architecture.


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People relax near a fountain and bicycles in the main square of Weiden, Upper Palatinate, Bavaria, Germany, on April 20, 2025. The area, sur...

#12289438

Daily Life In The Bavarian City Of Weiden

21 April 2025

People relax near a fountain and bicycles in the main square of Weiden, Upper Palatinate, Bavaria, Germany, on April 20, 2025. The area, sur...

#12289438

21 April 2025

People relax near a fountain and bicycles in the main square of Weiden, Upper Palatinate, Bavaria, Germany, on April 20, 2025. The area, surrounded by colorful historical buildings and cafes, serves as a popular social and cultural hub in the city's old town.


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Blue trams and mixed traffic move through an intersection at Max-Weber-Platz in Munich, Germany, on April 12, 2025. The area combines public...

#12259371

Everyday Life In Munich

13 April 2025

Blue trams and mixed traffic move through an intersection at Max-Weber-Platz in Munich, Germany, on April 12, 2025. The area combines public...

#12259371

13 April 2025

Blue trams and mixed traffic move through an intersection at Max-Weber-Platz in Munich, Germany, on April 12, 2025. The area combines public transit, car lanes, and bike paths, reflecting the city's integrated transportation system.


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Tattoo artists and enthusiasts get tattooed during the ''Nepal Tattoo Convention'' organized in Lalitpur, Nepal, on April 12, 2025. Tattoo c...

#12256418

Nepal Hosts Tattoo Convention

12 April 2025

Tattoo artists and enthusiasts get tattooed during the ''Nepal Tattoo Convention'' organized in Lalitpur, Nepal, on April 12, 2025. Tattoo c...

#12256418

12 April 2025

Tattoo artists and enthusiasts get tattooed during the ''Nepal Tattoo Convention'' organized in Lalitpur, Nepal, on April 12, 2025. Tattoo culture in Nepal is one of the oldest traditions practiced widely by the Newa:, Tharu, Gurungs, and Magar, the aboriginals of the Himalayan nation. According to the younger generation, traditional tattoos lack precise details, linking them more to the communities and spiritual beliefs, but modern tattoo designs focus more on aesthetics. Driven by aesthetic values, younger generations now fuse traditional beliefs with modern designs to ink various parts of their bodies. In Kathmandu Valley, tattoos in the past were mostly done during the Jatras (festivals) and Melas (carnivals) like Rato Machindra Jatra and Indra Jatra. Kathmandu's Tebahal and Bhaktapur's Thimi are famous for tattoo art, which is called ''Lha: Chyogu'' in the Nepali Bhasha or the Newa: language. 'Lha' in Newa: means 'flesh' and 'chyogu' means 'writing'; the tattoo on the legs of Newari women symbolizes their strength, and a belief follows that a person takes nothing but the tattoos on their body after death. On the way to heaven, if one finds hardships, they can sell the tattoos and therefore make the way to heaven more comfortably. Back then, coal and milk were mixed with plants to produce colors for the ink used to design the tattoos. Now, inks are widely used, poured into a machine, and then run over the sketched areas of the body.


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Tattoo artists and enthusiasts get tattooed during the ''Nepal Tattoo Convention'' organized in Lalitpur, Nepal, on April 12, 2025. Tattoo c...

#12256419

Nepal Hosts Tattoo Convention

12 April 2025

Tattoo artists and enthusiasts get tattooed during the ''Nepal Tattoo Convention'' organized in Lalitpur, Nepal, on April 12, 2025. Tattoo c...

#12256419

12 April 2025

Tattoo artists and enthusiasts get tattooed during the ''Nepal Tattoo Convention'' organized in Lalitpur, Nepal, on April 12, 2025. Tattoo culture in Nepal is one of the oldest traditions practiced widely by the Newa:, Tharu, Gurungs, and Magar, the aboriginals of the Himalayan nation. According to the younger generation, traditional tattoos lack precise details, linking them more to the communities and spiritual beliefs, but modern tattoo designs focus more on aesthetics. Driven by aesthetic values, younger generations now fuse traditional beliefs with modern designs to ink various parts of their bodies. In Kathmandu Valley, tattoos in the past were mostly done during the Jatras (festivals) and Melas (carnivals) like Rato Machindra Jatra and Indra Jatra. Kathmandu's Tebahal and Bhaktapur's Thimi are famous for tattoo art, which is called ''Lha: Chyogu'' in the Nepali Bhasha or the Newa: language. 'Lha' in Newa: means 'flesh' and 'chyogu' means 'writing'; the tattoo on the legs of Newari women symbolizes their strength, and a belief follows that a person takes nothing but the tattoos on their body after death. On the way to heaven, if one finds hardships, they can sell the tattoos and therefore make the way to heaven more comfortably. Back then, coal and milk were mixed with plants to produce colors for the ink used to design the tattoos. Now, inks are widely used, poured into a machine, and then run over the sketched areas of the body.


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
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Tattoo artists and enthusiasts get tattooed during the ''Nepal Tattoo Convention'' organized in Lalitpur, Nepal, on April 12, 2025. Tattoo c...

#12256420

Nepal Hosts Tattoo Convention

12 April 2025

Tattoo artists and enthusiasts get tattooed during the ''Nepal Tattoo Convention'' organized in Lalitpur, Nepal, on April 12, 2025. Tattoo c...

#12256420

12 April 2025

Tattoo artists and enthusiasts get tattooed during the ''Nepal Tattoo Convention'' organized in Lalitpur, Nepal, on April 12, 2025. Tattoo culture in Nepal is one of the oldest traditions practiced widely by the Newa:, Tharu, Gurungs, and Magar, the aboriginals of the Himalayan nation. According to the younger generation, traditional tattoos lack precise details, linking them more to the communities and spiritual beliefs, but modern tattoo designs focus more on aesthetics. Driven by aesthetic values, younger generations now fuse traditional beliefs with modern designs to ink various parts of their bodies. In Kathmandu Valley, tattoos in the past were mostly done during the Jatras (festivals) and Melas (carnivals) like Rato Machindra Jatra and Indra Jatra. Kathmandu's Tebahal and Bhaktapur's Thimi are famous for tattoo art, which is called ''Lha: Chyogu'' in the Nepali Bhasha or the Newa: language. 'Lha' in Newa: means 'flesh' and 'chyogu' means 'writing'; the tattoo on the legs of Newari women symbolizes their strength, and a belief follows that a person takes nothing but the tattoos on their body after death. On the way to heaven, if one finds hardships, they can sell the tattoos and therefore make the way to heaven more comfortably. Back then, coal and milk were mixed with plants to produce colors for the ink used to design the tattoos. Now, inks are widely used, poured into a machine, and then run over the sketched areas of the body.


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


Tattoo artists and enthusiasts get tattooed during the ''Nepal Tattoo Convention'' organized in Lalitpur, Nepal, on April 12, 2025. Tattoo c...

#12256421

Nepal Hosts Tattoo Convention

12 April 2025

Tattoo artists and enthusiasts get tattooed during the ''Nepal Tattoo Convention'' organized in Lalitpur, Nepal, on April 12, 2025. Tattoo c...

#12256421

12 April 2025

Tattoo artists and enthusiasts get tattooed during the ''Nepal Tattoo Convention'' organized in Lalitpur, Nepal, on April 12, 2025. Tattoo culture in Nepal is one of the oldest traditions practiced widely by the Newa:, Tharu, Gurungs, and Magar, the aboriginals of the Himalayan nation. According to the younger generation, traditional tattoos lack precise details, linking them more to the communities and spiritual beliefs, but modern tattoo designs focus more on aesthetics. Driven by aesthetic values, younger generations now fuse traditional beliefs with modern designs to ink various parts of their bodies. In Kathmandu Valley, tattoos in the past were mostly done during the Jatras (festivals) and Melas (carnivals) like Rato Machindra Jatra and Indra Jatra. Kathmandu's Tebahal and Bhaktapur's Thimi are famous for tattoo art, which is called ''Lha: Chyogu'' in the Nepali Bhasha or the Newa: language. 'Lha' in Newa: means 'flesh' and 'chyogu' means 'writing'; the tattoo on the legs of Newari women symbolizes their strength, and a belief follows that a person takes nothing but the tattoos on their body after death. On the way to heaven, if one finds hardships, they can sell the tattoos and therefore make the way to heaven more comfortably. Back then, coal and milk were mixed with plants to produce colors for the ink used to design the tattoos. Now, inks are widely used, poured into a machine, and then run over the sketched areas of the body.


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


Tattoo artists and enthusiasts get tattooed during the ''Nepal Tattoo Convention'' organized in Lalitpur, Nepal, on April 12, 2025. Tattoo c...

#12256422

Nepal Hosts Tattoo Convention

12 April 2025

Tattoo artists and enthusiasts get tattooed during the ''Nepal Tattoo Convention'' organized in Lalitpur, Nepal, on April 12, 2025. Tattoo c...

#12256422

12 April 2025

Tattoo artists and enthusiasts get tattooed during the ''Nepal Tattoo Convention'' organized in Lalitpur, Nepal, on April 12, 2025. Tattoo culture in Nepal is one of the oldest traditions practiced widely by the Newa:, Tharu, Gurungs, and Magar, the aboriginals of the Himalayan nation. According to the younger generation, traditional tattoos lack precise details, linking them more to the communities and spiritual beliefs, but modern tattoo designs focus more on aesthetics. Driven by aesthetic values, younger generations now fuse traditional beliefs with modern designs to ink various parts of their bodies. In Kathmandu Valley, tattoos in the past were mostly done during the Jatras (festivals) and Melas (carnivals) like Rato Machindra Jatra and Indra Jatra. Kathmandu's Tebahal and Bhaktapur's Thimi are famous for tattoo art, which is called ''Lha: Chyogu'' in the Nepali Bhasha or the Newa: language. 'Lha' in Newa: means 'flesh' and 'chyogu' means 'writing'; the tattoo on the legs of Newari women symbolizes their strength, and a belief follows that a person takes nothing but the tattoos on their body after death. On the way to heaven, if one finds hardships, they can sell the tattoos and therefore make the way to heaven more comfortably. Back then, coal and milk were mixed with plants to produce colors for the ink used to design the tattoos. Now, inks are widely used, poured into a machine, and then run over the sketched areas of the body.


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


Tattoo artists and enthusiasts get tattooed during the ''Nepal Tattoo Convention'' organized in Lalitpur, Nepal, on April 12, 2025. Tattoo c...

#12256423

Nepal Hosts Tattoo Convention

12 April 2025

Tattoo artists and enthusiasts get tattooed during the ''Nepal Tattoo Convention'' organized in Lalitpur, Nepal, on April 12, 2025. Tattoo c...

#12256423

12 April 2025

Tattoo artists and enthusiasts get tattooed during the ''Nepal Tattoo Convention'' organized in Lalitpur, Nepal, on April 12, 2025. Tattoo culture in Nepal is one of the oldest traditions practiced widely by the Newa:, Tharu, Gurungs, and Magar, the aboriginals of the Himalayan nation. According to the younger generation, traditional tattoos lack precise details, linking them more to the communities and spiritual beliefs, but modern tattoo designs focus more on aesthetics. Driven by aesthetic values, younger generations now fuse traditional beliefs with modern designs to ink various parts of their bodies. In Kathmandu Valley, tattoos in the past were mostly done during the Jatras (festivals) and Melas (carnivals) like Rato Machindra Jatra and Indra Jatra. Kathmandu's Tebahal and Bhaktapur's Thimi are famous for tattoo art, which is called ''Lha: Chyogu'' in the Nepali Bhasha or the Newa: language. 'Lha' in Newa: means 'flesh' and 'chyogu' means 'writing'; the tattoo on the legs of Newari women symbolizes their strength, and a belief follows that a person takes nothing but the tattoos on their body after death. On the way to heaven, if one finds hardships, they can sell the tattoos and therefore make the way to heaven more comfortably. Back then, coal and milk were mixed with plants to produce colors for the ink used to design the tattoos. Now, inks are widely used, poured into a machine, and then run over the sketched areas of the body.


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


Tattoo artists and enthusiasts get tattooed during the ''Nepal Tattoo Convention'' organized in Lalitpur, Nepal, on April 12, 2025. Tattoo c...

#12256424

Nepal Hosts Tattoo Convention

12 April 2025

Tattoo artists and enthusiasts get tattooed during the ''Nepal Tattoo Convention'' organized in Lalitpur, Nepal, on April 12, 2025. Tattoo c...

#12256424

12 April 2025

Tattoo artists and enthusiasts get tattooed during the ''Nepal Tattoo Convention'' organized in Lalitpur, Nepal, on April 12, 2025. Tattoo culture in Nepal is one of the oldest traditions practiced widely by the Newa:, Tharu, Gurungs, and Magar, the aboriginals of the Himalayan nation. According to the younger generation, traditional tattoos lack precise details, linking them more to the communities and spiritual beliefs, but modern tattoo designs focus more on aesthetics. Driven by aesthetic values, younger generations now fuse traditional beliefs with modern designs to ink various parts of their bodies. In Kathmandu Valley, tattoos in the past were mostly done during the Jatras (festivals) and Melas (carnivals) like Rato Machindra Jatra and Indra Jatra. Kathmandu's Tebahal and Bhaktapur's Thimi are famous for tattoo art, which is called ''Lha: Chyogu'' in the Nepali Bhasha or the Newa: language. 'Lha' in Newa: means 'flesh' and 'chyogu' means 'writing'; the tattoo on the legs of Newari women symbolizes their strength, and a belief follows that a person takes nothing but the tattoos on their body after death. On the way to heaven, if one finds hardships, they can sell the tattoos and therefore make the way to heaven more comfortably. Back then, coal and milk were mixed with plants to produce colors for the ink used to design the tattoos. Now, inks are widely used, poured into a machine, and then run over the sketched areas of the body.


Restricted to Editorial Use Only.
Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


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