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96 professional editorial images found
#12898976
23 October 2025
The Lumen logo appears on a smartphone screen, and the Palantir logo displays as the background on a laptop screen in this photo illustration in Athens, Greece, on October 23, 2025. Palantir Technologies Inc. provides AI software to Lumen Technologies Inc. in a new partnership, part of a push by the telecom company to support more AI services, and a bid by Palantir to reach more customers. (Photo Illustration by Nikolas Kokovlis/NurPhoto)
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#12898977
23 October 2025
The Lumen logo appears on a smartphone screen, and the Palantir logo displays as the background on a laptop screen in this photo illustration in Athens, Greece, on October 23, 2025. Palantir Technologies Inc. provides AI software to Lumen Technologies Inc. in a new partnership, part of a push by the telecom company to support more AI services, and a bid by Palantir to reach more customers. (Photo Illustration by Nikolas Kokovlis/NurPhoto)
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#12898978
23 October 2025
The Lumen logo appears on a smartphone screen, and the Palantir logo displays as the background on a laptop screen in this photo illustration in Athens, Greece, on October 23, 2025. Palantir Technologies Inc. provides AI software to Lumen Technologies Inc. in a new partnership, part of a push by the telecom company to support more AI services, and a bid by Palantir to reach more customers. (Photo Illustration by Nikolas Kokovlis/NurPhoto)
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#12898979
23 October 2025
The Lumen logo appears on a smartphone screen, and the Palantir logo displays as the background on a laptop screen in this photo illustration in Athens, Greece, on October 23, 2025. Palantir Technologies Inc. provides AI software to Lumen Technologies Inc. in a new partnership, part of a push by the telecom company to support more AI services, and a bid by Palantir to reach more customers. (Photo Illustration by Nikolas Kokovlis/NurPhoto)
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#12898980
23 October 2025
The Lumen logo appears on a smartphone screen, and the Palantir logo displays as the background on a laptop screen in this photo illustration in Athens, Greece, on October 23, 2025. Palantir Technologies Inc. provides AI software to Lumen Technologies Inc. in a new partnership, part of a push by the telecom company to support more AI services, and a bid by Palantir to reach more customers. (Photo Illustration by Nikolas Kokovlis/NurPhoto)
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#12898981
23 October 2025
The Palantir logo appears on a smartphone screen, and the Lumen logo displays as the background on a laptop screen in this photo illustration in Athens, Greece, on October 23, 2025. Palantir Technologies Inc. provides AI software to Lumen Technologies Inc. in a new partnership, which is part of a push by the telecom company to support more AI services and a bid by Palantir to reach more customers. (Photo Illustration by Nikolas Kokovlis/NurPhoto)
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#12898982
23 October 2025
The Palantir logo appears on a smartphone screen, and the Lumen logo displays as the background on a laptop screen in this photo illustration in Athens, Greece, on October 23, 2025. Palantir Technologies Inc. provides AI software to Lumen Technologies Inc. in a new partnership, which is part of a push by the telecom company to support more AI services and a bid by Palantir to reach more customers. (Photo Illustration by Nikolas Kokovlis/NurPhoto)
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#12898983
23 October 2025
The Palantir logo appears on a smartphone screen, and the Lumen logo displays as the background on a laptop screen in this photo illustration in Athens, Greece, on October 23, 2025. Palantir Technologies Inc. provides AI software to Lumen Technologies Inc. in a new partnership, which is part of a push by the telecom company to support more AI services and a bid by Palantir to reach more customers. (Photo Illustration by Nikolas Kokovlis/NurPhoto)
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#12898984
23 October 2025
The Palantir logo appears on a smartphone screen, and the Lumen logo displays as the background on a laptop screen in this photo illustration in Athens, Greece, on October 23, 2025. Palantir Technologies Inc. provides AI software to Lumen Technologies Inc. in a new partnership, which is part of a push by the telecom company to support more AI services and a bid by Palantir to reach more customers. (Photo Illustration by Nikolas Kokovlis/NurPhoto)
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#12898985
23 October 2025
The Palantir logo appears on a smartphone screen, and the Lumen logo displays as the background on a laptop screen in this photo illustration in Athens, Greece, on October 23, 2025. Palantir Technologies Inc. provides AI software to Lumen Technologies Inc. in a new partnership, which is part of a push by the telecom company to support more AI services and a bid by Palantir to reach more customers. (Photo Illustration by Nikolas Kokovlis/NurPhoto)
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#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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#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.
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#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.
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#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.
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#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.
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#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.