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"women in winter"
22,114 professional editorial images found
#13074293
8 December 2025
A woman takes a photo of the main New Year tree illuminated with garlands during the lighting ceremony on Hretska Square on Saint Nicholas Day in Odesa, Ukraine, on December 6, 2025
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#13072742
8 December 2025
A woman and a young person hold hands and walk away from the camera on a wet cobblestone street lined with parked cars, with the young person carrying a scarf in the German national colors (black, red, and yellow), in Rothenburg ob der Tauber, Bavaria, Germany, on December 7, 2025.
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#13071116
7 December 2025
Visitors are seen at the city's first ever "Jarmark" style Christmas market in Warsaw, Poland on 07 December, 2025.
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#13069260
7 December 2025
A Kashmiri woman burns tree branches to make charcoal, a fuel many families rely on to stay warm through the winter, in Srinagar, Jammu and Kashmir, on December 7, 2025. The region is in the grip of a severe cold wave, with temperatures plunging well below freezing and mornings marked by icy winds and frost-covered landscapes.
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#13062290
6 December 2025
A woman in a black hat and fur coat attends the opening of the Winter Festival ''Zimzolend'' on Liberty Square in Novi Sad, Serbia, on December 5, 2025.
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#13062291
6 December 2025
A woman with children attends the opening of the Winter Festival ''Zimzolend'' on Liberty Square in Novi Sad, Serbia, on December 5, 2025.
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#13062173
6 December 2025
A woman poses for a photo at the 16-meter main Christmas tree of Ukraine during the lighting ceremony in Sofiiska Square on the eve of Saint Nicholas Day in Kyiv, Ukraine, on December 5, 2025.
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#13062174
6 December 2025
A woman takes pictures of the 16-meter main Christmas tree of Ukraine during the lighting ceremony in Sofiiska Square outside Saint Sophia Cathedral on the eve of Saint Nicholas Day in Kyiv, Ukraine, on December 5, 2025.
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#13062052
5 December 2025
People wear winter clothing, including two women carrying an UGG branded shopping bag, as they walk along the busy Kaufinger Strasse shopping street adorned with seasonal decorations in the late afternoon in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on December 5, 2025. Kaufinger Strasse is one of the oldest streets in Munich and a major pedestrian zone, becoming extremely busy during the Christmas shopping season.
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#13062054
5 December 2025
People wear winter clothing, including two women carrying an UGG branded shopping bag, as they walk along the busy Kaufinger Strasse shopping street adorned with seasonal decorations in the late afternoon in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on December 5, 2025. Kaufinger Strasse is one of the oldest streets in Munich and a major pedestrian zone, becoming extremely busy during the Christmas shopping season.
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#13062055
5 December 2025
People wear winter clothing, including two women carrying an UGG branded shopping bag, as they walk along the busy Kaufinger Strasse shopping street adorned with seasonal decorations in the late afternoon in Munich, Bavaria, Germany, on December 5, 2025. Kaufinger Strasse is one of the oldest streets in Munich and a major pedestrian zone, becoming extremely busy during the Christmas shopping season.
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#13061277
5 December 2025
A woman walks on a cold winter evening in Sopore, Jammu and Kashmir, India, on December 5, 2025.
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#13057181
4 December 2025
A Nepali woman takes a selfie in front of the large-sized Newa: delicacy, Yo: Mari:, being paraded through the city center during the Yomari Punhi: and Jyapu Day celebration parade in Kathmandu, Nepal, on December 4, 2025. The steaming hot delicacy, shaped like a fig and filled with molasses and sesame seeds, is commonly called Yomari in the Newa community. It marks the start of the consumption of fresh-harvest rice from the full moon of Poush, the ninth month of the Nepali lunar calendar. The harvest festival, marked with fanfare by the Newa community of the Kathmandu Valley, gets its name from Yomari, the fresh-harvest rice sweetmeat. According to various beliefs, Suchandra and Krita, a married couple, first experimented with the fresh yield of rice from their field in present-day Panauti City in ancient times. The couple then distributed the new delicacy to the villagers, which was liked by all, and it was named Yomari, which in the Newa: language means ''tasty bread.'' It not only is tasty but also helps one to keep warm in winter and helps to increase blood and sperm.
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Nepal’s Indigenous Kirat Community Celebrates Udhauli Festival With Sakela Dance
4 December 2025
#13057204
4 December 2025
Members of Nepal's Kirat community take part in the mass celebration of the Sakela-Udhauli festival in Lalitpur, Nepal, on December 4, 2025. Hundreds of Kirati community members gather in Lalitpur, dancing and praying to the god with the onset of the harvest festival, which is also known as Udhauli. Kirant men and women clad in traditional attire observe the festival by beating drums, cymbals, imitating the activities of birds and other animals, and exchanging greetings with each other. This festival is celebrated by worshiping land and ancestors in hopes of getting better crops, health, and property. Kirat Mundhum, the holy book of Kirat, mentions that the year of 365 days is divided into two phases: Ubhauli (going up) and Udhauli (going down). In old days, people move uphill and downhill during these seasons. Ubhauli is celebrated every year on Baishak Sulka Purnima, on the same day as Buddha Purnima/Buddha Jayanti in the Nepali month of Baishak (April-May). Traditionally, during the summer, the Kirat people move uphill to avoid the heat and malaria. They perform Ubhauli rituals before they move and during that, they worship their ancestors and nature for better health and crops. Traditionally, the Kirat people climb up to the mountains in summer to avoid the heat and malaria (epidemic) after performing the Ubhauli rituals. During these traditional rituals, they worship their ancestors and nature, seeking better wealth and crops. At the start of winter, with similar rituals for Udhauli, they move down the hill.
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Nepal’s Indigenous Kirat Community Celebrates Udhauli Festival With Sakela Dance
4 December 2025
#13057205
4 December 2025
Members of Nepal's Kirat community take part in the mass celebration of the Sakela-Udhauli festival in Lalitpur, Nepal, on December 4, 2025. Hundreds of Kirati community members gather in Lalitpur, dancing and praying to the god with the onset of the harvest festival, which is also known as Udhauli. Kirant men and women clad in traditional attire observe the festival by beating drums, cymbals, imitating the activities of birds and other animals, and exchanging greetings with each other. This festival is celebrated by worshiping land and ancestors in hopes of getting better crops, health, and property. Kirat Mundhum, the holy book of Kirat, mentions that the year of 365 days is divided into two phases: Ubhauli (going up) and Udhauli (going down). In old days, people move uphill and downhill during these seasons. Ubhauli is celebrated every year on Baishak Sulka Purnima, on the same day as Buddha Purnima/Buddha Jayanti in the Nepali month of Baishak (April-May). Traditionally, during the summer, the Kirat people move uphill to avoid the heat and malaria. They perform Ubhauli rituals before they move and during that, they worship their ancestors and nature for better health and crops. Traditionally, the Kirat people climb up to the mountains in summer to avoid the heat and malaria (epidemic) after performing the Ubhauli rituals. During these traditional rituals, they worship their ancestors and nature, seeking better wealth and crops. At the start of winter, with similar rituals for Udhauli, they move down the hill.
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Nepal’s Indigenous Kirat Community Celebrates Udhauli Festival With Sakela Dance
4 December 2025
#13057206
4 December 2025
Members of Nepal's Kirat community take part in the mass celebration of the Sakela-Udhauli festival in Lalitpur, Nepal, on December 4, 2025. Hundreds of Kirati community members gather in Lalitpur, dancing and praying to the god with the onset of the harvest festival, which is also known as Udhauli. Kirant men and women clad in traditional attire observe the festival by beating drums, cymbals, imitating the activities of birds and other animals, and exchanging greetings with each other. This festival is celebrated by worshiping land and ancestors in hopes of getting better crops, health, and property. Kirat Mundhum, the holy book of Kirat, mentions that the year of 365 days is divided into two phases: Ubhauli (going up) and Udhauli (going down). In old days, people move uphill and downhill during these seasons. Ubhauli is celebrated every year on Baishak Sulka Purnima, on the same day as Buddha Purnima/Buddha Jayanti in the Nepali month of Baishak (April-May). Traditionally, during the summer, the Kirat people move uphill to avoid the heat and malaria. They perform Ubhauli rituals before they move and during that, they worship their ancestors and nature for better health and crops. Traditionally, the Kirat people climb up to the mountains in summer to avoid the heat and malaria (epidemic) after performing the Ubhauli rituals. During these traditional rituals, they worship their ancestors and nature, seeking better wealth and crops. At the start of winter, with similar rituals for Udhauli, they move down the hill.
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