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360° panorama by Thomas K Sharpless. Click the image to open the interactive version.
A perfect late Spring afternoon in Philadelphia's Fairmount Park. An improved version of a previously published stereo panorama.
360° panorama by Santiago Ribas - 360portugal. Click the image to open the interactive version.
Open during the Archbishopric of D. Sousa De Sousa for access to the Cathedral, which is mainly used by those who come from the north side, and that for centuries served as rapid entrance to the archbishops that had their palace a few meters, in the wide contiguous of the Pacos. Gives access to the cloister of Santo Amaro
360° panorama by Santiago Ribas - 360portugal. Click the image to open the interactive version.
Located on the north side of the cloister, it was commanded by Archbishop D. Diogo de Sousa, for his deposit, having dedicated it to "Jesus of Mercy." This chapel houses the Archbishop Tombs, D. Diogo de Sousa and Frei Caetano Brand~ao. In the altar gold carving altarial is the image of Our Lady of Piedade, which was placed on a later date for its construction.
360° panorama by Natsutoshi Nomoto. Click the image to open the interactive version.
A friend of mine was moving out of the house, so I took some pictures of the view from the balcony before she left.It is located at the highest point of the Koishikawa plateau, so you can see the southwest side very well. Fuji and Tokyo Tower until a few years ago, but they are no longer visible now. Only about 220 degrees of high-resolution photography was taken at 60mm, so the rest was filled in by shrinking the mirror image. Camera: ILCE-7RM3 Lens: SEL24105G@60mm (24mm for sky)Date taken: 2021/02/17 19:35:58-20:18:22ISO100 F8 4,1/2,30sec
Воскресенье, 21 Февраля 2021 г. 09:37
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360° panorama by William l. Click the image to open the interactive version.
View of the upper end of Lost Creek Lake, Oregon from the Red Grotto area. This area is hard to access except by boat or extensive bushwhack, however it contains interesting volcanic formations & even a double waterfall further up into Red Rock Canyon.
Воскресенье, 21 Февраля 2021 г. 07:56
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360° panorama by William l. Click the image to open the interactive version.
Red Rock Canyon is located at the upper end of Lost Creek Lake, Oregon. Within the canyon lies this seasonal waterfall that contains a double drop totaling around 200'. While visible briefly along Highway 62, it is hard to access unless you have a boat or good stamina through rough terrain.
360° panorama by Kolesnikov Sergey. Click the image to open the interactive version.
For many commuters around the world, a subway journey means speeding from one drab station to the next, surrounded by too many uncomfortable, impatient bodies. Completely different story was in USSR and now in Russia. In Moscow, St Petersburg, Kiev and other big cities metro stations were designed as architectural wonders. Taking the subway is akin to walking through a national heritage sit. Depending on where you get off, you'll receive a crash course in such diverse architectural movements as Baroque, Art Deco, Futurism, Modern or Hi-tech, and face from stained glass windows, marble columns, crystal chandeliers, gilded mosaics and painted scenes from Russian history to modern iron and glass. Russia's first metro system was part of Joseph Stalin's first Five-Year Plan to rapidly industrialize the Soviet Union in the 1920s and 30s. The main idea was to show its citizens and the world the power and possibilities of socially oriented state. All this magnificent underground palaces were build as a transport system for the ordinary people. Now Moscow Metro is the busiest metro system outside of Asia, the world’s busiest by daily ridership and the 6th longest in the world (200 stations, route length is more than 350 km).
360° panorama by Kolesnikov Sergey. Click the image to open the interactive version.
For many commuters around the world, a subway journey means speeding from one drab station to the next, surrounded by too many uncomfortable, impatient bodies. Completely different story was in USSR and now in Russia. In Moscow, St Petersburg, Kiev and other big cities metro stations were designed as architectural wonders. Taking the subway is akin to walking through a national heritage sit. Depending on where you get off, you'll receive a crash course in such diverse architectural movements as Baroque, Art Deco, Futurism, Modern or Hi-tech, and face from stained glass windows, marble columns, crystal chandeliers, gilded mosaics and painted scenes from Russian history to modern iron and glass. Russia's first metro system was part of Joseph Stalin's first Five-Year Plan to rapidly industrialize the Soviet Union in the 1920s and 30s. The main idea was to show its citizens and the world the power and possibilities of socially oriented state. All this magnificent underground palaces were build as a transport system for the ordinary people. Now Moscow Metro is the busiest metro system outside of Asia, the world’s busiest by daily ridership and the 6th longest in the world (200 stations, route length is more than 350 km).