There is no place for tourists here: world attractions taken from an extremely unfavorable angle
Do you know what girls who don't get out of Instagram have in common with attractions? Both of them have the most favorable angle for the photo. For example, the Taj Mahal is constantly photographed so that in the foreground there is a swimming pool in which the palace is reflected, and it is even difficult to imagine the Colosseum not from the side of the beveled part of the wall.
Once we made a post in which the main man-made beauties of the planet were presented from a bird's-eye view, and their splendor was revealed in a completely new way. But after all, you can sneak up on them from a completely unexpected side, so to speak, by untrodden paths. And then the surrounding reality can pretty much spoil the grandeur of the structure.
View of the Pyramid of Cheops from Giza Street.
CN Tower in Toronto.
The sculpture "Motherland calls!" in Volgograd is worth admiring only from specially designated places.
The Indian Taj Mahal is located in a poor province and contrasts sharply with its typical landscapes.
Relatively recently, the Statue of Liberty was adjacent to a large-scale industrial zone.
It is not so easy to identify the Moscow City business center in this photo.
There is a swamp behind the world-famous Hindu temple complex Angkor Wat in Cambodia.
Some rails approach the Parthenon from the back.
The Golden Gate Bridge is best photographed from afar.
And Las Vegas is exclusively at night and preferably from the ground.
Keywords: Attractions | Las vegas | Moscow city | Pyramids | Angle | Statue of Liberty | USA