Tourists have no place here: world attractions taken from an extremely unfavorable angle
Categories: World
By Pictolic https://pictolic.com/article/tourists-have-no-place-here-world-attractions-taken-from-an-extremely-unfavorable-angle.htmlDo you know what the girls who do not get out of Instagram have in common with the sights? 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, which reflects the palace, and the Colosseum is even difficult to imagine 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 you can also 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 business center "Moscow City"in this photo.
Behind the world-famous Hindu temple complex of Angkor Wat in Cambodia, a swamp splashes.
On the back side, some rails approach the Parthenon.
The Golden Gate Bridge is best photographed from afar.
And Las Vegas-only at night and preferably from the ground.
Keywords: USA | Las Vegas | Pyramids | Attractions | Mir | Moscow City | Statue of Liberty | Angle
Post News ArticleRecent articles

Time not only changes the appearance and habits of the people, but also force us to drastically change some things. To them ...

Despite the unpleasant cold, winter gives us its art. And it's not just the traditional patterns on the windows: frosts make real ...
Related articles

1950's years, often called the Golden era of American history, a time of happiness and prosperity — despite the racial ...

The founder and publisher of the obscene satirical magazine Hustler and other near-pornographic business initiatives, Larry Flint ...

The series of images "Kiss", created by photographer Maggie West from Los Angeles for her book of the same name, contains images of ...
What do you imagine people working in IT? The stereotype gives us images of tousled boys in glasses and strictly dressed girls with ...