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"lock couples"
56 professional editorial images found
#12618981
5 August 2025
Love locks attach to the Hohenzollern Bridge (Hohenzollern Bruecke) in Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, on August 3, 2025. The bridge is a popular attraction for travelers and couples who mark their visit with symbolic padlocks.
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#12618982
5 August 2025
Love locks attach to the Hohenzollern Bridge (Hohenzollern Bruecke) in Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, on August 3, 2025. The bridge is a popular attraction for travelers and couples who mark their visit with symbolic padlocks.
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#12618983
5 August 2025
People observe the dense rows of love locks attached to the Hohenzollern Bridge (Hohenzollern Bruecke) in Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, on August 3, 2025. The bridge is a popular attraction for travelers and couples who mark their visit with symbolic padlocks.
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#12618984
5 August 2025
People observe the dense rows of love locks attached to the Hohenzollern Bridge (Hohenzollern Bruecke) in Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, on August 3, 2025. The bridge is a popular attraction for travelers and couples who mark their visit with symbolic padlocks.
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#12618985
5 August 2025
A couple observes the dense rows of love locks attached to the Hohenzollern Bridge in Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, on August 3, 2025. The bridge is a popular attraction for travelers and couples marking their visit with symbolic padlocks.
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#12618986
5 August 2025
A man observes the dense rows of love locks attached to the Hohenzollern Bridge (Hohenzollern Bruecke) in Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, on August 3, 2025. The bridge is a popular attraction for travelers and couples marking their visit with symbolic padlocks.
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#12551242
13 July 2025
An elderly couple stands by a metal gate overlooking a stream lock structure near a footbridge in Memmingen, Swabia, Lower Allgaeu, Allgaeu, Germany, on July 12, 2025.
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#12426108
30 May 2025
A red regional train passes over the Hohenzollern Bridge as two women walk past thousands of love padlocks attached to the fence in Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, on May 21, 2022. The bridge is a popular spot for couples who attach padlocks to symbolize their love and throw the key into the Rhine River below.
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#12426107
30 May 2025
Two women look at the densely packed love padlocks attached to the railing of the Hohenzollern Bridge in Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, on May 21, 2022. The bridge is famous for its tradition of couples locking padlocks to symbolize enduring love and throwing the keys into the Rhine River.
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#12297818
24 April 2025
People rest and hydrate on a shaded bench beneath a large tree next to bicycles in Regensburg, Upper Palatinate, Bavaria, Germany, on April 19, 2025. The quiet corner, framed by arched windows and dappled light, reflects the slower rhythms of city life during a spring afternoon.
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#11188288
29 April 2024
A love padlock is being left near the Sacre Coeur cathedral in Montmartre, Paris, France, on April 23, 2024. The French capital is a few months away from the start of the Olympic Games, which are due to start on July 26, 2024.
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#9686872
4 March 2023
Banana Stalk Fly (Neriidae) are slender, long-legged flies, a family of true flies (Diptera) closely related to the Micropezidae, found mainly in tropical regions. Neriids breed in rotting vegetation, such as decaying tree bark or rotting fruit. Neriid males engage in spectacular battles for territory or access to females, near -the egg-laying sites. The rivals elevate their bodies to an almost vertical posture, and pound each other with the ventral surfaces of their heads, strike each other with their forelegs, or try to place each other in a head-lock. The Mating couples of Banana Stalk Flys are on the bark of a rotten moringa tree at Tehatta, West Bengal, India on 04/03/2023.
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#9686874
4 March 2023
Banana Stalk Fly (Neriidae) are slender, long-legged flies, a family of true flies (Diptera) closely related to the Micropezidae, found mainly in tropical regions. Neriids breed in rotting vegetation, such as decaying tree bark or rotting fruit. Neriid males engage in spectacular battles for territory or access to females, near -the egg-laying sites. The rivals elevate their bodies to an almost vertical posture, and pound each other with the ventral surfaces of their heads, strike each other with their forelegs, or try to place each other in a head-lock. The Mating couples of Banana Stalk Flys are on the bark of a rotten moringa tree at Tehatta, West Bengal, India on 04/03/2023.
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#9686876
4 March 2023
Banana Stalk Fly (Neriidae) are slender, long-legged flies, a family of true flies (Diptera) closely related to the Micropezidae, found mainly in tropical regions. Neriids breed in rotting vegetation, such as decaying tree bark or rotting fruit. Neriid males engage in spectacular battles for territory or access to females, near -the egg-laying sites. The rivals elevate their bodies to an almost vertical posture, and pound each other with the ventral surfaces of their heads, strike each other with their forelegs, or try to place each other in a head-lock. The Mating couples of Banana Stalk Flys are on the bark of a rotten moringa tree at Tehatta, West Bengal, India on 04/03/2023.
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#9686878
4 March 2023
Banana Stalk Fly (Neriidae) are slender, long-legged flies, a family of true flies (Diptera) closely related to the Micropezidae, found mainly in tropical regions. Neriids breed in rotting vegetation, such as decaying tree bark or rotting fruit. Neriid males engage in spectacular battles for territory or access to females, near -the egg-laying sites. The rivals elevate their bodies to an almost vertical posture, and pound each other with the ventral surfaces of their heads, strike each other with their forelegs, or try to place each other in a head-lock. The Mating couples of Banana Stalk Flys are on the bark of a rotten moringa tree at Tehatta, West Bengal, India on 04/03/2023.
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#9686880
4 March 2023
Banana Stalk Fly (Neriidae) are slender, long-legged flies, a family of true flies (Diptera) closely related to the Micropezidae, found mainly in tropical regions. Neriids breed in rotting vegetation, such as decaying tree bark or rotting fruit. Neriid males engage in spectacular battles for territory or access to females, near -the egg-laying sites. The rivals elevate their bodies to an almost vertical posture, and pound each other with the ventral surfaces of their heads, strike each other with their forelegs, or try to place each other in a head-lock. The Mating couples of Banana Stalk Flys are on the bark of a rotten moringa tree at Tehatta, West Bengal, India on 04/03/2023.
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