Forgotten Heritage Photography | Matt Emmett
Matt Emmett is a photographer who goal is to rediscover the forgotten worlds all around us. His online portfolio, Forgotten Heritage Photography, focuses ...
Cyril Porchet, the Swiss photographer, rediscovered altars of baroque churches in Spain, Austria and Germany showing the exuberance, the saturation level of the ornamentation, figurative and symbolic ...
The Australian travel photographer Peter Stewart, who focuses on capturing bustling cityscapes and landscapes, captured his series "Stacked in Hong Kong" showing us the dense living environments and ...
3D Typography Numbers by RDN Studio
The French Studio which is always searching for new horizons, RDN -based in Nantes- designed 3D typography animated numbers on colorful backgrounds using ...
Abstract forms, concept 37 is a breathtaking building with its simple yet effective details provides an eloquent combination that would make you wonder how such a place exists. The upward moving ...
The white Temple, Wat Rong Khun designed the white temple in 1997 in Thailand, it looks like a heavenly item placed on earth by god. It's the most detailed temple in Thailand, but some people would ...
Cloud City | Makerie studio and photographer Luke Kirwan
The New York –based paper artists the Makerie studio collaborated with the London-based photographer Luke Kirwan and produced this cloud city ...
This is how the inside of the Nasir Al-Mulk Mosque, located in Iran, looks like. Fortunately, photographer Mohammad Domiri documents the geometric wonder of Mosque architecture in Iran for viewers ...
The French photographer Laurent Chéhère in partnership with Galerie Paris-Beijing displayed the "Flying Houses" series utilizing photography and digital manipulation. Buildings were isolated from ...
The first thing we notice when going to a city is the facade of the buildings. Building ornamentation sets up an idea of happens in each with in. The ongoing façade series presented by Zacharie ...
Parametric design is no stranger to the world of architecture, but capturing it so beautifully in an image to the point where it appears infinite, is a feat!
courtesy of Alexandre Jacques
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