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DUKAS_189400486_NUR
NATO Ship To Monitor And Has Docked In Copenhagen
Crew members stand on the deck of the German Navy frigate FGS Hamburg F220, which is docked in Copenhagen, Denmark, on September 29, 2025, ahead of the upcoming EU summit. (Photo by Kristian Tuxen Ladegaard Berg/NurPhoto) -
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Woman Alone With Dog By City River
A woman sits alone on wooden decking with her dog by the riverside in Amsterdam, Netherlands, on September 10, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
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Early Autumn Evening By Wooden Lake Pier
Three women sit on a wooden pier during an early autumn evening at Lake Starnberg in Starnberg, Bavaria, Germany, on September 21, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
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Outdoor Area With Ships At Maritime Museum Rotterdam
Historic and modern ships are moored in the outdoor harbor area of the Maritime Museum in Rotterdam, Netherlands, on September 7, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
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Outdoor Area With Ships At Maritime Museum Rotterdam
Historic and modern ships are moored in the outdoor harbor area of the Maritime Museum in Rotterdam, Netherlands, on September 7, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
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Outdoor Area With Ships At Maritime Museum Rotterdam
Historic and modern ships are moored in the outdoor harbor area of the Maritime Museum in Rotterdam, Netherlands, on September 7, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
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Outdoor Area With Ships At Maritime Museum Rotterdam
Historic and modern ships are moored in the outdoor harbor area of the Maritime Museum in Rotterdam, Netherlands, on September 7, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_189098676_NUR
Outdoor Area With Ships At Maritime Museum Rotterdam
Historic and modern ships are moored in the outdoor harbor area of the Maritime Museum in Rotterdam, Netherlands, on September 7, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
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Outdoor Area With Ships At Maritime Museum Rotterdam
Historic and modern ships are moored in the outdoor harbor area of the Maritime Museum in Rotterdam, Netherlands, on September 7, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_189098674_NUR
Outdoor Area With Ships At Maritime Museum Rotterdam
Historic and modern ships are moored in the outdoor harbor area of the Maritime Museum in Rotterdam, Netherlands, on September 7, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_188900885_NUR
Woman Alone With Dog At The Waterfront
A woman sits with her dog on a wooden deck by the water in Amsterdam, Netherlands, on September 10, 2025. The dog, wearing a red harness, rests quietly beside her as she looks out across the water. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
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Mike Hohnen: I quit skateboarding when I realised I'd never be good enough. A decade on, I found fun doesn't need an end goal.
Mike Hohnen: I quit skateboarding when I realised I'd never be good enough. A decade on, I found fun doesn't need an end goal.
Skateboarding gave Mike Hohnen a lot of joy, but in his early 20s he decided to 'grow up' and give it up. Then he saw Arisa Trew at the Olympics.
Mike Hohnen gets back into skateboarding after a long hiates, Lilyfield, Sydney. 19 February 2025.
Jessica Hromas / Guardian / eyevine
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DUKAS_182062742_EYE
Mike Hohnen: I quit skateboarding when I realised I'd never be good enough. A decade on, I found fun doesn't need an end goal.
Mike Hohnen: I quit skateboarding when I realised I'd never be good enough. A decade on, I found fun doesn't need an end goal.
Skateboarding gave Mike Hohnen a lot of joy, but in his early 20s he decided to 'grow up' and give it up. Then he saw Arisa Trew at the Olympics.
Mike Hohnen gets back into skateboarding after a long hiates, Lilyfield, Sydney. 19 February 2025.
Jessica Hromas / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
DUKAS_182062759_EYE
Mike Hohnen: I quit skateboarding when I realised I'd never be good enough. A decade on, I found fun doesn't need an end goal.
Mike Hohnen: I quit skateboarding when I realised I'd never be good enough. A decade on, I found fun doesn't need an end goal.
Skateboarding gave Mike Hohnen a lot of joy, but in his early 20s he decided to 'grow up' and give it up. Then he saw Arisa Trew at the Olympics.
Mike Hohnen gets back into skateboarding after a long hiates, Lilyfield, Sydney. 19 February 2025.
Jessica Hromas / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
DUKAS_182062776_EYE
Mike Hohnen: I quit skateboarding when I realised I'd never be good enough. A decade on, I found fun doesn't need an end goal.
Mike Hohnen: I quit skateboarding when I realised I'd never be good enough. A decade on, I found fun doesn't need an end goal.
Skateboarding gave Mike Hohnen a lot of joy, but in his early 20s he decided to 'grow up' and give it up. Then he saw Arisa Trew at the Olympics.
Mike Hohnen gets back into skateboarding after a long hiates, Lilyfield, Sydney. 19 February 2025.
Jessica Hromas / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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http://www.eyevine.com (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) -
DUKAS_163480667_EYE
One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.
About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.
Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.
The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
October 2023, London, UK.
© Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163480661_EYE
One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.
About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.
Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.
The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
October 2023, London, UK.
© Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163480655_EYE
One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.
About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.
Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.
The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
Pictured; A young skater Diggs English looks around the show
October 2023, London, UK.
© Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163480669_EYE
One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.
About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.
Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.
The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
Pictured; A young skater Diggs English looks around the show
October 2023, London, UK.
© Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163480664_EYE
One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.
About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.
Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.
The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
Pictured; A young skater Diggs English looks around the show
October 2023, London, UK.
© Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163480659_EYE
One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.
About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.
Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.
The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
Pictured; A young skater Diggs English looks around the show
October 2023, London, UK.
© Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163480658_EYE
One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.
About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.
Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.
The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
October 2023, London, UK.
© Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163480660_EYE
One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.
About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.
Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.
The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
October 2023, London, UK.
© Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163480662_EYE
One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.
About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.
Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.
The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
October 2023, London, UK.
© Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163480668_EYE
One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.
About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.
Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.
The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
October 2023, London, UK.
© Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163480653_EYE
One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.
About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.
Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.
The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
October 2023, London, UK.
© Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163480665_EYE
One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.
About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.
Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.
The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
October 2023, London, UK.
© Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163480656_EYE
One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.
About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.
Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.
The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
October 2023, London, UK.
© Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163480670_EYE
One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.
About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.
Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.
The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
October 2023, London, UK.
© Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163480663_EYE
One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.
About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.
Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.
The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
October 2023, London, UK.
© Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163480654_EYE
One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.
About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.
Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.
The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
October 2023, London, UK.
© Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUKAS_163480657_EYE
One giant ollie for skate-kind! The show where you pull your own gnarly tricks. Design museum unveils Skateboard design exhibition
From Tony Hawk's first ever board to a fully functioning mini-ramp for those brave enough to have a go, the Design Museum is racing through 70 years of hot wheels.
About 100 boards are on display, half of which are loaned from the US-based Skateboarding Hall of Fame and Museum, while others come from historian and self-confessed hoarder Nick Halkias's collection. The biggest get is the first ever board used by the sport's biggest star, Tony Hawk, courtesy of his archive.
Skateboard, as the show is simply titled, begins with prototype boards created in mid-century childhood bedrooms, complete with splinters, bent nails and rust. Rapidly the design and accoutrements change: from steel to clay to polyurethane wheels. There are two of the earliest models of boards with sloping tips, known as kicktails, which would become industry standard by the 1970s.
The design museum unveils the first history of Skateboard design exhibition from 1950-present day.
Pictured; White board was Tony Hawks first skateboard.
October 2023, London, UK.
© Graeme Robertson / Guardian / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Guardian / eyevine. All Rights Reserved. -
DUK10143595_008
FEATURE - Touristen in den Rainbow Mountains in Wangye, China
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Stephen Shaver/UPI/Shutterstock (12164087a)
Tourists take photos from an observation deck in the Rainbow Mountains in the Wangye Daxian Landform Geological Park, northwest Gansu Province, on Sunday, June 20, 2021. The natural Rainbow Mountains are one of the world's geological wonders and was recognized as a UNESCO World Heritage in 2009.
Tourists Take Photos of the Rainbow Mountains in Wangye, China, Gansu Province - 22 Jun 2021
(c) Dukas -
DUK10141451_016
FEATURE - Nah am Leben unter Wasser: Ausfahrbare Kapsel für Superyacht
Ferrari Press Agency
Hydrosphere 1
Ref 12776
29/03/2021
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: Gresham Yacht Design
A yacht design company has unveiled a new toy for owners – a retrofit glass-walled sphere for studying underwater life.Called the Hydrosphere, it lets people explore the ocean without ever leaving a vesselUK-based Gresham Yacht Design says the sphere drops down from a hatch in the hull.It is accessed by a circular stairway to a viewing area with room for seven.The Hydrosphere will offer views that would normally have needed a submersible to get.The advantage is that s does not need the preparation of a separate vessel for launch or a dedicated captain and crew. The Hydrosphere is equipped with special outside lighting to illuminate the undersea sights.
OPS: Render of the Hydrosphere fitted to a superyacht.
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10141451_015
FEATURE - Nah am Leben unter Wasser: Ausfahrbare Kapsel für Superyacht
Ferrari Press Agency
Hydrosphere 1
Ref 12776
29/03/2021
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: Gresham Yacht Design
A yacht design company has unveiled a new toy for owners – a retrofit glass-walled sphere for studying underwater life.Called the Hydrosphere, it lets people explore the ocean without ever leaving a vesselUK-based Gresham Yacht Design says the sphere drops down from a hatch in the hull.It is accessed by a circular stairway to a viewing area with room for seven.The Hydrosphere will offer views that would normally have needed a submersible to get.The advantage is that s does not need the preparation of a separate vessel for launch or a dedicated captain and crew. The Hydrosphere is equipped with special outside lighting to illuminate the undersea sights.
OPS: Render of the Hydrosphere fitted to a superyacht, deploying for use
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10141451_014
FEATURE - Nah am Leben unter Wasser: Ausfahrbare Kapsel für Superyacht
Ferrari Press Agency
Hydrosphere 1
Ref 12776
29/03/2021
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: Gresham Yacht Design
A yacht design company has unveiled a new toy for owners – a retrofit glass-walled sphere for studying underwater life.Called the Hydrosphere, it lets people explore the ocean without ever leaving a vesselUK-based Gresham Yacht Design says the sphere drops down from a hatch in the hull.It is accessed by a circular stairway to a viewing area with room for seven.The Hydrosphere will offer views that would normally have needed a submersible to get.The advantage is that s does not need the preparation of a separate vessel for launch or a dedicated captain and crew. The Hydrosphere is equipped with special outside lighting to illuminate the undersea sights.
OPS: Render of the Hydrosphere fitted to a superyacht, deploying for use
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10141451_013
FEATURE - Nah am Leben unter Wasser: Ausfahrbare Kapsel für Superyacht
Ferrari Press Agency
Hydrosphere 1
Ref 12776
29/03/2021
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: Gresham Yacht Design
A yacht design company has unveiled a new toy for owners – a retrofit glass-walled sphere for studying underwater life.Called the Hydrosphere, it lets people explore the ocean without ever leaving a vesselUK-based Gresham Yacht Design says the sphere drops down from a hatch in the hull.It is accessed by a circular stairway to a viewing area with room for seven.The Hydrosphere will offer views that would normally have needed a submersible to get.The advantage is that s does not need the preparation of a separate vessel for launch or a dedicated captain and crew. The Hydrosphere is equipped with special outside lighting to illuminate the undersea sights.
OPS: Render of the Hydrosphere fitted to a superyacht. Glass floor
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10141451_012
FEATURE - Nah am Leben unter Wasser: Ausfahrbare Kapsel für Superyacht
Ferrari Press Agency
Hydrosphere 1
Ref 12776
29/03/2021
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: Gresham Yacht Design
A yacht design company has unveiled a new toy for owners – a retrofit glass-walled sphere for studying underwater life.Called the Hydrosphere, it lets people explore the ocean without ever leaving a vesselUK-based Gresham Yacht Design says the sphere drops down from a hatch in the hull.It is accessed by a circular stairway to a viewing area with room for seven.The Hydrosphere will offer views that would normally have needed a submersible to get.The advantage is that s does not need the preparation of a separate vessel for launch or a dedicated captain and crew. The Hydrosphere is equipped with special outside lighting to illuminate the undersea sights.
OPS: Render of the Hydrosphere fitted to a superyacht, deploying for use
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10141451_011
FEATURE - Nah am Leben unter Wasser: Ausfahrbare Kapsel für Superyacht
Ferrari Press Agency
Hydrosphere 1
Ref 12776
29/03/2021
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: Gresham Yacht Design
A yacht design company has unveiled a new toy for owners – a retrofit glass-walled sphere for studying underwater life.Called the Hydrosphere, it lets people explore the ocean without ever leaving a vesselUK-based Gresham Yacht Design says the sphere drops down from a hatch in the hull.It is accessed by a circular stairway to a viewing area with room for seven.The Hydrosphere will offer views that would normally have needed a submersible to get.The advantage is that s does not need the preparation of a separate vessel for launch or a dedicated captain and crew. The Hydrosphere is equipped with special outside lighting to illuminate the undersea sights.
OPS: Render of the Hydrosphere fitted to a superyacht, deploying for use
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10141451_010
FEATURE - Nah am Leben unter Wasser: Ausfahrbare Kapsel für Superyacht
Ferrari Press Agency
Hydrosphere 1
Ref 12776
29/03/2021
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: Gresham Yacht Design
A yacht design company has unveiled a new toy for owners – a retrofit glass-walled sphere for studying underwater life.Called the Hydrosphere, it lets people explore the ocean without ever leaving a vesselUK-based Gresham Yacht Design says the sphere drops down from a hatch in the hull.It is accessed by a circular stairway to a viewing area with room for seven.The Hydrosphere will offer views that would normally have needed a submersible to get.The advantage is that s does not need the preparation of a separate vessel for launch or a dedicated captain and crew. The Hydrosphere is equipped with special outside lighting to illuminate the undersea sights.
OPS: Render of the Hydrosphere fitted to a superyacht, deploying for use
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10141451_009
FEATURE - Nah am Leben unter Wasser: Ausfahrbare Kapsel für Superyacht
Ferrari Press Agency
Hydrosphere 1
Ref 12776
29/03/2021
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: Gresham Yacht Design
A yacht design company has unveiled a new toy for owners – a retrofit glass-walled sphere for studying underwater life.Called the Hydrosphere, it lets people explore the ocean without ever leaving a vesselUK-based Gresham Yacht Design says the sphere drops down from a hatch in the hull.It is accessed by a circular stairway to a viewing area with room for seven.The Hydrosphere will offer views that would normally have needed a submersible to get.The advantage is that s does not need the preparation of a separate vessel for launch or a dedicated captain and crew. The Hydrosphere is equipped with special outside lighting to illuminate the undersea sights.
OPS: Render of the Hydrosphere fitted to a superyacht.
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10141451_008
FEATURE - Nah am Leben unter Wasser: Ausfahrbare Kapsel für Superyacht
Ferrari Press Agency
Hydrosphere 1
Ref 12776
29/03/2021
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: Gresham Yacht Design
A yacht design company has unveiled a new toy for owners – a retrofit glass-walled sphere for studying underwater life.Called the Hydrosphere, it lets people explore the ocean without ever leaving a vesselUK-based Gresham Yacht Design says the sphere drops down from a hatch in the hull.It is accessed by a circular stairway to a viewing area with room for seven.The Hydrosphere will offer views that would normally have needed a submersible to get.The advantage is that s does not need the preparation of a separate vessel for launch or a dedicated captain and crew. The Hydrosphere is equipped with special outside lighting to illuminate the undersea sights.
OPS: Render of the Hydrosphere fitted to a superyacht.
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10141451_007
FEATURE - Nah am Leben unter Wasser: Ausfahrbare Kapsel für Superyacht
Ferrari Press Agency
Hydrosphere 1
Ref 12776
29/03/2021
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: Gresham Yacht Design
A yacht design company has unveiled a new toy for owners – a retrofit glass-walled sphere for studying underwater life.Called the Hydrosphere, it lets people explore the ocean without ever leaving a vesselUK-based Gresham Yacht Design says the sphere drops down from a hatch in the hull.It is accessed by a circular stairway to a viewing area with room for seven.The Hydrosphere will offer views that would normally have needed a submersible to get.The advantage is that s does not need the preparation of a separate vessel for launch or a dedicated captain and crew. The Hydrosphere is equipped with special outside lighting to illuminate the undersea sights.
OPS: Render of the Hydrosphere fitted to a superyacht, deploying for use
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10141451_006
FEATURE - Nah am Leben unter Wasser: Ausfahrbare Kapsel für Superyacht
Ferrari Press Agency
Hydrosphere 1
Ref 12776
29/03/2021
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: Gresham Yacht Design
A yacht design company has unveiled a new toy for owners – a retrofit glass-walled sphere for studying underwater life.Called the Hydrosphere, it lets people explore the ocean without ever leaving a vesselUK-based Gresham Yacht Design says the sphere drops down from a hatch in the hull.It is accessed by a circular stairway to a viewing area with room for seven.The Hydrosphere will offer views that would normally have needed a submersible to get.The advantage is that s does not need the preparation of a separate vessel for launch or a dedicated captain and crew. The Hydrosphere is equipped with special outside lighting to illuminate the undersea sights.
OPS: Render of the Hydrosphere fitted to a superyacht, deploying for use
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10141451_005
FEATURE - Nah am Leben unter Wasser: Ausfahrbare Kapsel für Superyacht
Ferrari Press Agency
Hydrosphere 1
Ref 12776
29/03/2021
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: Gresham Yacht Design
A yacht design company has unveiled a new toy for owners – a retrofit glass-walled sphere for studying underwater life.Called the Hydrosphere, it lets people explore the ocean without ever leaving a vesselUK-based Gresham Yacht Design says the sphere drops down from a hatch in the hull.It is accessed by a circular stairway to a viewing area with room for seven.The Hydrosphere will offer views that would normally have needed a submersible to get.The advantage is that s does not need the preparation of a separate vessel for launch or a dedicated captain and crew. The Hydrosphere is equipped with special outside lighting to illuminate the undersea sights.
OPS: Render of the Hydrosphere fitted to a superyacht.
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10141451_004
FEATURE - Nah am Leben unter Wasser: Ausfahrbare Kapsel für Superyacht
Ferrari Press Agency
Hydrosphere 1
Ref 12776
29/03/2021
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: Gresham Yacht Design
A yacht design company has unveiled a new toy for owners – a retrofit glass-walled sphere for studying underwater life.Called the Hydrosphere, it lets people explore the ocean without ever leaving a vesselUK-based Gresham Yacht Design says the sphere drops down from a hatch in the hull.It is accessed by a circular stairway to a viewing area with room for seven.The Hydrosphere will offer views that would normally have needed a submersible to get.The advantage is that s does not need the preparation of a separate vessel for launch or a dedicated captain and crew. The Hydrosphere is equipped with special outside lighting to illuminate the undersea sights.
OPS: Render of the Hydrosphere fitted to a superyacht.
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10141451_003
FEATURE - Nah am Leben unter Wasser: Ausfahrbare Kapsel für Superyacht
Ferrari Press Agency
Hydrosphere 1
Ref 12776
29/03/2021
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: Gresham Yacht Design
A yacht design company has unveiled a new toy for owners – a retrofit glass-walled sphere for studying underwater life.Called the Hydrosphere, it lets people explore the ocean without ever leaving a vesselUK-based Gresham Yacht Design says the sphere drops down from a hatch in the hull.It is accessed by a circular stairway to a viewing area with room for seven.The Hydrosphere will offer views that would normally have needed a submersible to get.The advantage is that s does not need the preparation of a separate vessel for launch or a dedicated captain and crew. The Hydrosphere is equipped with special outside lighting to illuminate the undersea sights.
OPS: Render of the Hydrosphere fitted to a superyacht, deploying for use
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10141451_002
FEATURE - Nah am Leben unter Wasser: Ausfahrbare Kapsel für Superyacht
Ferrari Press Agency
Hydrosphere 1
Ref 12776
29/03/2021
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: Gresham Yacht Design
A yacht design company has unveiled a new toy for owners – a retrofit glass-walled sphere for studying underwater life.Called the Hydrosphere, it lets people explore the ocean without ever leaving a vesselUK-based Gresham Yacht Design says the sphere drops down from a hatch in the hull.It is accessed by a circular stairway to a viewing area with room for seven.The Hydrosphere will offer views that would normally have needed a submersible to get.The advantage is that s does not need the preparation of a separate vessel for launch or a dedicated captain and crew. The Hydrosphere is equipped with special outside lighting to illuminate the undersea sights.
OPS: Render of the Hydrosphere fitted to a superyacht.
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10141451_001
FEATURE - Nah am Leben unter Wasser: Ausfahrbare Kapsel für Superyacht
Ferrari Press Agency
Hydrosphere 1
Ref 12776
29/03/2021
See Ferrari text
Pictures must credit: Gresham Yacht Design
A yacht design company has unveiled a new toy for owners – a retrofit glass-walled sphere for studying underwater life.Called the Hydrosphere, it lets people explore the ocean without ever leaving a vesselUK-based Gresham Yacht Design says the sphere drops down from a hatch in the hull.It is accessed by a circular stairway to a viewing area with room for seven.The Hydrosphere will offer views that would normally have needed a submersible to get.The advantage is that s does not need the preparation of a separate vessel for launch or a dedicated captain and crew. The Hydrosphere is equipped with special outside lighting to illuminate the undersea sights.
OPS: Render of the Hydrosphere fitted to a superyacht, deploying for use
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_120954559_EYE
Best of Defence Imagery 2020
Image of flight deck crews from the UK and U.S, coming together for a phot op on the deck of HMS Queen Elizabeth, seen with a U.S F-35B hovering in the background.
HMS Queen Elizabeth has embarked two squadrons of F-35B stealth jets: the UK’s 617 Sqn and US Marine Corps fighter attack squadron 211. Alongside eight Merlin helicopters of 820 and 846 Naval Air Squadrons it is the largest air group to operate from a Royal Navy carrier in more than thirty years, and the largest air group of fifth generation fighters at sea anywhere in the world.
This month’s Group Exercise (‘GROUPEX’) will see HMS Queen Elizabeth joined by warships from the UK, US and the Netherlands, which will accompany the carrier on her first global deployment in 2021. However, before then, the newly-formed Carrier Strike Group will be put through its paces off the north east coast of Scotland as part of Joint Warrior, NATO’s largest annual exercise.© MOD Crown Copyright / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)
© Crown Copyright / eyevine
