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  • Leather Processing Industry In Dhaka
    DUKAS_186654769_ZUM
    Leather Processing Industry In Dhaka
    July 4, 2025, Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh: Workers process raw hides at a tannery in Hazaribagh an industrial facility where animal skins, mainly from cows and goats, are transformed into usable leather. Through a series of chemical and mechanical treatments, the hides are made suitable for crafting a wide range of products such as shoes, bags, suitcases, belts, wallets, and jackets. (Credit Image: © Syed Mahabubul Kader/ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc.

     

  • Leather Processing Industry In Dhaka
    DUKAS_186654768_ZUM
    Leather Processing Industry In Dhaka
    July 4, 2025, Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh: Workers process raw hides at a tannery in Hazaribagh, an industrial facility where animal skins, mainly from cows and goats, are transformed into usable leather. Through a series of chemical and mechanical treatments, the hides are made suitable for crafting a wide range of products such as shoes, bags, suitcases, belts, wallets, and jackets. (Credit Image: © Syed Mahabubul Kader/ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc.

     

  • Europe Heatwave
    DUKAS_186618928_NUR
    Europe Heatwave
    A scantily dressed women is seen on Piazza San Pietro at the Vatican in this file photo taken in Rome, Italy on 24 Apri, 2025. (Photo by Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto)

     

  • Man Sunbathing On A Bench By Lake
    DUKAS_186610182_NUR
    Man Sunbathing On A Bench By Lake
    A man in swimwear sits on a bench next to moored boats in Starnberg, Upper Bavaria, Bavaria, Germany, on July 1, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto)

     

  • Squid-inspired camouflage for soldiers
    DUKAS_186580647_FER
    Squid-inspired camouflage for soldiers
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Camouflage 1
    Ref 16952
    02/07/2025
    See Ferrari pictures
    Picture MUST credit: UC Irvine
    Camouflage inspired by the colour changing skin of squids is being developed to help soldiers stay out of sight on the battlefield.
    Boffins are developing a stretchable material that mimics the colour-shifting ability of the longfin inshore squid.
    They say it could one day help troops slip past visual and thermal detection.
    The project is being funded by the USA’s defence research agency, DARPA.
    It is a joint study by the University of California, Irvine and the US-based research centre, the Marine Biological Laboratory.
    The longfin squid uses light-reflecting cells called iridophores to instantly shift between transparency and colour.
    This natural survival tactic now forms the basis of the synthetic stealth material with potential military use.
    Inside the cells, coils of a protein called reflectin act like natural mirrors, manipulating how light reflects off the squid’s skin.
    The researchers have captured the first 3D images of this nano-architecture revealing the intricate architecture.

    OPS:Photos and thermal camera images of the squid-inspired composite materials chnaging appearance while being stretched (top) and soaked in water (bottom) both above a heated surface.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Squid-inspired camouflage for soldiers
    DUKAS_186580646_FER
    Squid-inspired camouflage for soldiers
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Camouflage 1
    Ref 16952
    02/07/2025
    See Ferrari pictures
    Picture MUST credit: UC Irvine
    Camouflage inspired by the colour changing skin of squids is being developed to help soldiers stay out of sight on the battlefield.
    Boffins are developing a stretchable material that mimics the colour-shifting ability of the longfin inshore squid.
    They say it could one day help troops slip past visual and thermal detection.
    The project is being funded by the USA’s defence research agency, DARPA.
    It is a joint study by the University of California, Irvine and the US-based research centre, the Marine Biological Laboratory.
    The longfin squid uses light-reflecting cells called iridophores to instantly shift between transparency and colour.
    This natural survival tactic now forms the basis of the synthetic stealth material with potential military use.
    Inside the cells, coils of a protein called reflectin act like natural mirrors, manipulating how light reflects off the squid’s skin.
    The researchers have captured the first 3D images of this nano-architecture revealing the intricate architecture.

    OPS:Photos and thermal camera images of the squid-inspired composite materials chnaging appearance while being stretched (top) and soaked in water (bottom) both above a heated surface.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Squid-inspired camouflage for soldiers
    DUKAS_186580645_FER
    Squid-inspired camouflage for soldiers
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Camouflage 1
    Ref 16952
    02/07/2025
    See Ferrari pictures
    Picture MUST credit: UC Irvine
    Camouflage inspired by the colour changing skin of squids is being developed to help soldiers stay out of sight on the battlefield.
    Boffins are developing a stretchable material that mimics the colour-shifting ability of the longfin inshore squid.
    They say it could one day help troops slip past visual and thermal detection.
    The project is being funded by the USA’s defence research agency, DARPA.
    It is a joint study by the University of California, Irvine and the US-based research centre, the Marine Biological Laboratory.
    The longfin squid uses light-reflecting cells called iridophores to instantly shift between transparency and colour.
    This natural survival tactic now forms the basis of the synthetic stealth material with potential military use.
    Inside the cells, coils of a protein called reflectin act like natural mirrors, manipulating how light reflects off the squid’s skin.
    The researchers have captured the first 3D images of this nano-architecture revealing the intricate architecture.

    OPS:Photos and thermal camera images of the squid-inspired composite materials chnaging appearance while being stretched (top) and soaked in water (bottom) both above a heated surface.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Squid-inspired camouflage for soldiers
    DUKAS_186580644_FER
    Squid-inspired camouflage for soldiers
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Camouflage 1
    Ref 16952
    02/07/2025
    See Ferrari pictures
    Picture MUST credit: UC Irvine
    Camouflage inspired by the colour changing skin of squids is being developed to help soldiers stay out of sight on the battlefield.
    Boffins are developing a stretchable material that mimics the colour-shifting ability of the longfin inshore squid.
    They say it could one day help troops slip past visual and thermal detection.
    The project is being funded by the USA’s defence research agency, DARPA.
    It is a joint study by the University of California, Irvine and the US-based research centre, the Marine Biological Laboratory.
    The longfin squid uses light-reflecting cells called iridophores to instantly shift between transparency and colour.
    This natural survival tactic now forms the basis of the synthetic stealth material with potential military use.
    Inside the cells, coils of a protein called reflectin act like natural mirrors, manipulating how light reflects off the squid’s skin.
    The researchers have captured the first 3D images of this nano-architecture revealing the intricate architecture.

    OPS:Photos and thermal camera images of the squid-inspired composite materials chnaging appearance while being stretched (top) and soaked in water (bottom) both above a heated surface.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Squid-inspired camouflage for soldiers
    DUKAS_186580643_FER
    Squid-inspired camouflage for soldiers
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Camouflage 1
    Ref 16952
    02/07/2025
    See Ferrari pictures
    Picture MUST credit: UC Irvine
    Camouflage inspired by the colour changing skin of squids is being developed to help soldiers stay out of sight on the battlefield.
    Boffins are developing a stretchable material that mimics the colour-shifting ability of the longfin inshore squid.
    They say it could one day help troops slip past visual and thermal detection.
    The project is being funded by the USA’s defence research agency, DARPA.
    It is a joint study by the University of California, Irvine and the US-based research centre, the Marine Biological Laboratory.
    The longfin squid uses light-reflecting cells called iridophores to instantly shift between transparency and colour.
    This natural survival tactic now forms the basis of the synthetic stealth material with potential military use.
    Inside the cells, coils of a protein called reflectin act like natural mirrors, manipulating how light reflects off the squid’s skin.
    The researchers have captured the first 3D images of this nano-architecture revealing the intricate architecture.

    OPS:Photos and thermal camera images of the squid-inspired composite materials chnaging appearance while being stretched (top) and soaked in water (bottom) both above a heated surface.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Squid-inspired camouflage for soldiers
    DUKAS_186580642_FER
    Squid-inspired camouflage for soldiers
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Camouflage 1
    Ref 16952
    02/07/2025
    See Ferrari pictures
    Picture MUST credit: UC Irvine
    Camouflage inspired by the colour changing skin of squids is being developed to help soldiers stay out of sight on the battlefield.
    Boffins are developing a stretchable material that mimics the colour-shifting ability of the longfin inshore squid.
    They say it could one day help troops slip past visual and thermal detection.
    The project is being funded by the USA’s defence research agency, DARPA.
    It is a joint study by the University of California, Irvine and the US-based research centre, the Marine Biological Laboratory.
    The longfin squid uses light-reflecting cells called iridophores to instantly shift between transparency and colour.
    This natural survival tactic now forms the basis of the synthetic stealth material with potential military use.
    Inside the cells, coils of a protein called reflectin act like natural mirrors, manipulating how light reflects off the squid’s skin.
    The researchers have captured the first 3D images of this nano-architecture revealing the intricate architecture.

    OPS:Images of the entire body (top left) and dorsal mantle (top right) of a squid show the splotches’ blue, green, yellow, orange and red iridescent angle-dependent colours. An individual splotch (bottom, from left) transitions from transparent to red to orange to green at 0, 60, 90 and 120 seconds, respectively, when subjected to chemical and neurophysiological stimuli.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Daily Life In Warsaw
    DUKAS_186571058_NUR
    Daily Life In Warsaw
    A woman in a short dress is seen on the Royal Castle Square in Warsaw, Poland on 01 July, 2025. (Photo by Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto)

     

  • Daily Life In Warsaw
    DUKAS_186571049_NUR
    Daily Life In Warsaw
    A woman in a short dress is seen on the Royal Castle Square in Warsaw, Poland on 01 July, 2025. (Photo by Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto)

     

  • Street Art Festival In Warsaw
    DUKAS_186511992_NUR
    Street Art Festival In Warsaw
    Actors are seen performing in an outdoor theatre performance called "Baltic Holiday" during the Warsaw Street Art Festival in Warsaw, Poland on 28 June, 2025. (Photo by Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto)

     

  • Erotic Fair In Warsaw
    DUKAS_186440552_NUR
    Erotic Fair In Warsaw
    A woman with lipstick makeup is seen at the EroChain Expo erotic fair in Warsaw, Poland on 27 June, 2025. (Photo by Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto)

     

  • Sensitive skin to give robots the human touch
    DUKAS_185916427_FER
    Sensitive skin to give robots the human touch

    Ferrari Press Agency

    Robot skin 1

    Ref 16900

    12/06/2024

    See Ferrari text

    Pictures must credit: University of Cambridge

    Scientists have developed a low-cost, durable, highly-sensitive robotic ‘skin’ that can be added to robotic hands enabling robots to detect information about their surroundings in a way that’s similar to humans.

    The UK researchers, from the University of Cambridge and University College London say the conductive skin is easy to fabricate and can be melted down and formed into a wide range of complex shapes.

    The artificial skin is packed with ultra-sensitive sensors that detect pressure, texture, temperature and even “pain-like signals.”

    The skin is made from an electrolysed hydrogel with electrodes embedded around the wrist.

    Electrical fields generated across the skin detect different types of stimulation.

    These sensors monitor thousands of bits of information which detect
    where the stimulation is and the type.

    Although the robotic skin is not as sensitive as human skin, it can detect signals from over 860,000 tiny pathways in the material.

    It can recognise different types of touch and pressure – like the tap of a finger, a hot or cold surface, damage caused by cutting or stabbing, or multiple points being touched at once – in a single material.

    OPS: The electrolysed hydrogel used for the skin moulded into the shape of a hand.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Sensitive skin to give robots the human touch
    DUKAS_185916426_FER
    Sensitive skin to give robots the human touch

    Ferrari Press Agency

    Robot skin 1

    Ref 16900

    12/06/2024

    See Ferrari text

    Pictures must credit: University of Cambridge

    Scientists have developed a low-cost, durable, highly-sensitive robotic ‘skin’ that can be added to robotic hands enabling robots to detect information about their surroundings in a way that’s similar to humans.

    The UK researchers, from the University of Cambridge and University College London say the conductive skin is easy to fabricate and can be melted down and formed into a wide range of complex shapes.

    The artificial skin is packed with ultra-sensitive sensors that detect pressure, texture, temperature and even “pain-like signals.”

    The skin is made from an electrolysed hydrogel with electrodes embedded around the wrist.

    Electrical fields generated across the skin detect different types of stimulation.

    These sensors monitor thousands of bits of information which detect
    where the stimulation is and the type.

    Although the robotic skin is not as sensitive as human skin, it can detect signals from over 860,000 tiny pathways in the material.

    It can recognise different types of touch and pressure – like the tap of a finger, a hot or cold surface, damage caused by cutting or stabbing, or multiple points being touched at once – in a single material.

    OPS: A robotic hand with the sensitive new skin

    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Sensitive skin to give robots the human touch
    DUKAS_185916425_FER
    Sensitive skin to give robots the human touch

    Ferrari Press Agency

    Robot skin 1

    Ref 16900

    12/06/2024

    See Ferrari text

    Pictures must credit: University of Cambridge

    Scientists have developed a low-cost, durable, highly-sensitive robotic ‘skin’ that can be added to robotic hands enabling robots to detect information about their surroundings in a way that’s similar to humans.

    The UK researchers, from the University of Cambridge and University College London say the conductive skin is easy to fabricate and can be melted down and formed into a wide range of complex shapes.

    The artificial skin is packed with ultra-sensitive sensors that detect pressure, texture, temperature and even “pain-like signals.”

    The skin is made from an electrolysed hydrogel with electrodes embedded around the wrist.

    Electrical fields generated across the skin detect different types of stimulation.

    These sensors monitor thousands of bits of information which detect
    where the stimulation is and the type.

    Although the robotic skin is not as sensitive as human skin, it can detect signals from over 860,000 tiny pathways in the material.

    It can recognise different types of touch and pressure – like the tap of a finger, a hot or cold surface, damage caused by cutting or stabbing, or multiple points being touched at once – in a single material.

    OPS: Illustration of some of the things the skin can sense.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Sensitive skin to give robots the human touch
    DUKAS_185916424_FER
    Sensitive skin to give robots the human touch

    Ferrari Press Agency

    Robot skin 1

    Ref 16900

    12/06/2024

    See Ferrari text

    Pictures must credit: University of Cambridge

    Scientists have developed a low-cost, durable, highly-sensitive robotic ‘skin’ that can be added to robotic hands enabling robots to detect information about their surroundings in a way that’s similar to humans.

    The UK researchers, from the University of Cambridge and University College London say the conductive skin is easy to fabricate and can be melted down and formed into a wide range of complex shapes.

    The artificial skin is packed with ultra-sensitive sensors that detect pressure, texture, temperature and even “pain-like signals.”

    The skin is made from an electrolysed hydrogel with electrodes embedded around the wrist.

    Electrical fields generated across the skin detect different types of stimulation.

    These sensors monitor thousands of bits of information which detect
    where the stimulation is and the type.

    Although the robotic skin is not as sensitive as human skin, it can detect signals from over 860,000 tiny pathways in the material.

    It can recognise different types of touch and pressure – like the tap of a finger, a hot or cold surface, damage caused by cutting or stabbing, or multiple points being touched at once – in a single material.

    OPS: A robotic hand with the sensitive new skin under testing

    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Sensitive skin to give robots the human touch
    DUKAS_185916423_FER
    Sensitive skin to give robots the human touch

    Ferrari Press Agency

    Robot skin 1

    Ref 16900

    12/06/2024

    See Ferrari text

    Pictures must credit: University of Cambridge

    Scientists have developed a low-cost, durable, highly-sensitive robotic ‘skin’ that can be added to robotic hands enabling robots to detect information about their surroundings in a way that’s similar to humans.

    The UK researchers, from the University of Cambridge and University College London say the conductive skin is easy to fabricate and can be melted down and formed into a wide range of complex shapes.

    The artificial skin is packed with ultra-sensitive sensors that detect pressure, texture, temperature and even “pain-like signals.”

    The skin is made from an electrolysed hydrogel with electrodes embedded around the wrist.

    Electrical fields generated across the skin detect different types of stimulation.

    These sensors monitor thousands of bits of information which detect
    where the stimulation is and the type.

    Although the robotic skin is not as sensitive as human skin, it can detect signals from over 860,000 tiny pathways in the material.

    It can recognise different types of touch and pressure – like the tap of a finger, a hot or cold surface, damage caused by cutting or stabbing, or multiple points being touched at once – in a single material.

    OPS: A robotic hand with the sensitive new skin feels the touch of a human

    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • Sensitive skin to give robots the human touch
    DUKAS_185916422_FER
    Sensitive skin to give robots the human touch

    Ferrari Press Agency

    Robot skin 1

    Ref 16900

    12/06/2024

    See Ferrari text

    Pictures must credit: University of Cambridge

    Scientists have developed a low-cost, durable, highly-sensitive robotic ‘skin’ that can be added to robotic hands enabling robots to detect information about their surroundings in a way that’s similar to humans.

    The UK researchers, from the University of Cambridge and University College London say the conductive skin is easy to fabricate and can be melted down and formed into a wide range of complex shapes.

    The artificial skin is packed with ultra-sensitive sensors that detect pressure, texture, temperature and even “pain-like signals.”

    The skin is made from an electrolysed hydrogel with electrodes embedded around the wrist.

    Electrical fields generated across the skin detect different types of stimulation.

    These sensors monitor thousands of bits of information which detect
    where the stimulation is and the type.

    Although the robotic skin is not as sensitive as human skin, it can detect signals from over 860,000 tiny pathways in the material.

    It can recognise different types of touch and pressure – like the tap of a finger, a hot or cold surface, damage caused by cutting or stabbing, or multiple points being touched at once – in a single material.

    OPS: A robotic hand with the sensitive new skin, shakes hands with a human.

    Picture supplied by Ferrari
    (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS)

     

  • 'Skinned' PETA Protest Outside Coach Store In London
    DUKAS_185397595_ZUM
    'Skinned' PETA Protest Outside Coach Store In London
    May 29, 2025, London, England, United Kingdom: PETA activists brought the message 'Leather is someone's skin' to shoppers at the Regent Street Coach store on Thursday, as one was hung upside down and had his throat slit before being 'skinned'. The display aims to point out that humans and cows are the same in all the ways that matter, encourage consumers to opt for vegan alternatives, and call out Coach's continued sale of 'animal- and planet-killing' leather. Credit Image: © Tayfun Salci/ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc.

     

  • 'Skinned' PETA Protest Outside Coach Store In London
    DUKAS_185397594_ZUM
    'Skinned' PETA Protest Outside Coach Store In London
    May 29, 2025, London, England, United Kingdom: PETA activists brought the message 'Leather is someone's skin' to shoppers at the Regent Street Coach store on Thursday, as one was hung upside down and had his throat slit before being 'skinned'. The display aims to point out that humans and cows are the same in all the ways that matter, encourage consumers to opt for vegan alternatives, and call out Coach's continued sale of 'animal- and planet-killing' leather. (Credit Image: © Tayfun Salci/ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc.

     

  • PETA Protest Outside Clothing Store In London
    DUKAS_185390440_ZUM
    PETA Protest Outside Clothing Store In London
    May 29, 2025, London, England, United Kingdom: PETA activists brought the message ''Leather is someone's skin,' to shoppers at the Regent Street Coach store on Thursday, as one was hung upside down and had his throat slit before being 'skinned.' The display aims to point out that humans and cows are the same in all the ways that matter, encourage consumers to opt for vegan alternatives, and call out Coach's continued sale of 'animal- and planet-killing' leather. (Credit Image: © Tayfun Salci/ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc.

     

  • ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday  Procession
    DUKAS_183724262_NUR
    ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday Procession
    A penitent, hooded, carries heavy chains and has thorns buried in the skin, taking part in the Good Friday procession, walking through the main streets of the city. The Procession of Engrillados de Atlixco is a main religious tradition in the country, in Atlixco, Mexico, on April 18, 2025. (Photo by Carlos Santiago/Eyepix Group/NurPhoto)

     

  • ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday  Procession
    DUKAS_183724260_NUR
    ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday Procession
    Penitents hooded carry heavy chains and have thorns buried in their skin, taking part in the Good Friday procession, walking through the main streets of the city. The Procession of Engrillados de Atlixco is a main religious tradition in the country on April 18, 2025, in Atlixco, Mexico. (Photo by Carlos Santiago/Eyepix Group/NurPhoto)

     

  • ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday  Procession
    DUKAS_183724258_NUR
    ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday Procession
    Penitents hooded carry heavy chains and have thorns buried in their skin, taking part in the Good Friday procession, walking through the main streets of the city. The Procession of Engrillados de Atlixco is a main religious tradition in the country on April 18, 2025, in Atlixco, Mexico. (Photo by Carlos Santiago/Eyepix Group/NurPhoto)

     

  • ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday  Procession
    DUKAS_183724256_NUR
    ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday Procession
    A penitent, hooded, carries heavy chains and has thorns buried in the skin, taking part in the Good Friday procession, walking through the main streets of the city. The Procession of Engrillados de Atlixco is a main religious tradition in the country, in Atlixco, Mexico, on April 18, 2025. (Photo by Carlos Santiago/Eyepix Group/NurPhoto)

     

  • ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday  Procession
    DUKAS_183724254_NUR
    ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday Procession
    A penitent, hooded, carries heavy chains and has thorns buried in the skin, taking part in the Good Friday procession, walking through the main streets of the city. The Procession of Engrillados de Atlixco is a main religious tradition in the country, in Atlixco, Mexico, on April 18, 2025. (Photo by Carlos Santiago/Eyepix Group/NurPhoto)

     

  • ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday  Procession
    DUKAS_183724252_NUR
    ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday Procession
    Penitents hooded carry heavy chains and have thorns buried in their skin, taking part in the Good Friday procession, walking through the main streets of the city. The Procession of Engrillados de Atlixco is a main religious tradition in the country on April 18, 2025, in Atlixco, Mexico. (Photo by Carlos Santiago/Eyepix Group/NurPhoto)

     

  • ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday  Procession
    DUKAS_183724250_NUR
    ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday Procession
    A penitent, hooded, carries heavy chains and has thorns buried in the skin, taking part in the Good Friday procession, walking through the main streets of the city. The Procession of Engrillados de Atlixco is a main religious tradition in the country, in Atlixco, Mexico, on April 18, 2025. (Photo by Carlos Santiago/Eyepix Group/NurPhoto)

     

  • ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday  Procession
    DUKAS_183724248_NUR
    ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday Procession
    Penitents hooded carry heavy chains and have thorns buried in their skin, taking part in the Good Friday procession, walking through the main streets of the city. The Procession of Engrillados de Atlixco is a main religious tradition in the country on April 18, 2025, in Atlixco, Mexico. (Photo by Carlos Santiago/Eyepix Group/NurPhoto)

     

  • ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday  Procession
    DUKAS_183724246_NUR
    ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday Procession
    A penitent, hooded, carries heavy chains and has thorns buried in the skin, taking part in the Good Friday procession, walking through the main streets of the city. The Procession of Engrillados de Atlixco is a main religious tradition in the country, in Atlixco, Mexico, on April 18, 2025. (Photo by Carlos Santiago/Eyepix Group/NurPhoto)

     

  • ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday  Procession
    DUKAS_183724244_NUR
    ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday Procession
    A penitent, hooded, carries heavy chains and has thorns buried in the skin, taking part in the Good Friday procession, walking through the main streets of the city. The Procession of Engrillados de Atlixco is a main religious tradition in the country, in Atlixco, Mexico, on April 18, 2025. (Photo by Carlos Santiago/Eyepix Group/NurPhoto)

     

  • ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday  Procession
    DUKAS_183724242_NUR
    ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday Procession
    A penitent, hooded, carries heavy chains and has thorns buried in the skin, taking part in the Good Friday procession, walking through the main streets of the city. The Procession of Engrillados de Atlixco is a main religious tradition in the country, in Atlixco, Mexico, on April 18, 2025. (Photo by Carlos Santiago/Eyepix Group/NurPhoto)

     

  • ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday  Procession
    DUKAS_183724240_NUR
    ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday Procession
    A penitent, hooded, carries heavy chains and has thorns buried in the skin, taking part in the Good Friday procession, walking through the main streets of the city. The Procession of Engrillados de Atlixco is a main religious tradition in the country, in Atlixco, Mexico, on April 18, 2025. (Photo by Carlos Santiago/Eyepix Group/NurPhoto)

     

  • ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday  Procession
    DUKAS_183724238_NUR
    ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday Procession
    A penitent, hooded, carries heavy chains and has thorns buried in the skin, taking part in the Good Friday procession, walking through the main streets of the city. The Procession of Engrillados de Atlixco is a main religious tradition in the country, in Atlixco, Mexico, on April 18, 2025. (Photo by Carlos Santiago/Eyepix Group/NurPhoto)

     

  • ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday  Procession
    DUKAS_183724236_NUR
    ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday Procession
    A penitent, hooded, carries heavy chains and has thorns buried in the skin, taking part in the Good Friday procession, walking through the main streets of the city. The Procession of Engrillados de Atlixco is a main religious tradition in the country, in Atlixco, Mexico, on April 18, 2025. (Photo by Carlos Santiago/Eyepix Group/NurPhoto)

     

  • ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday  Procession
    DUKAS_183724234_NUR
    ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday Procession
    Penitents hooded carry heavy chains and have thorns buried in their skin, taking part in the Good Friday procession, walking through the main streets of the city. The Procession of Engrillados de Atlixco is a main religious tradition in the country on April 18, 2025, in Atlixco, Mexico. (Photo by Carlos Santiago/Eyepix Group/NurPhoto)

     

  • ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday  Procession
    DUKAS_183724232_NUR
    ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday Procession
    A penitent, hooded, carries heavy chains and has thorns buried in the skin, taking part in the Good Friday procession, walking through the main streets of the city. The Procession of Engrillados de Atlixco is a main religious tradition in the country, in Atlixco, Mexico, on April 18, 2025. (Photo by Carlos Santiago/Eyepix Group/NurPhoto)

     

  • ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday  Procession
    DUKAS_183724230_NUR
    ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday Procession
    A penitent, hooded, carries heavy chains and has thorns buried in the skin, taking part in the Good Friday procession, walking through the main streets of the city. The Procession of Engrillados de Atlixco is a main religious tradition in the country, in Atlixco, Mexico, on April 18, 2025. (Photo by Carlos Santiago/Eyepix Group/NurPhoto)

     

  • ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday  Procession
    DUKAS_183724228_NUR
    ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday Procession
    A penitent, hooded, carries heavy chains and has thorns buried in the skin, taking part in the Good Friday procession, walking through the main streets of the city. The Procession of Engrillados de Atlixco is a main religious tradition in the country, in Atlixco, Mexico, on April 18, 2025. (Photo by Carlos Santiago/Eyepix Group/NurPhoto)

     

  • ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday  Procession
    DUKAS_183724226_NUR
    ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday Procession
    A penitent, hooded, carries heavy chains and has thorns buried in the skin, taking part in the Good Friday procession, walking through the main streets of the city. The Procession of Engrillados de Atlixco is a main religious tradition in the country, in Atlixco, Mexico, on April 18, 2025. (Photo by Carlos Santiago/Eyepix Group/NurPhoto)

     

  • ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday  Procession
    DUKAS_183724223_NUR
    ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday Procession
    A penitent, hooded, carries heavy chains and has thorns buried in the skin, taking part in the Good Friday procession, walking through the main streets of the city. The Procession of Engrillados de Atlixco is a main religious tradition in the country, in Atlixco, Mexico, on April 18, 2025. (Photo by Carlos Santiago/Eyepix Group/NurPhoto)

     

  • ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday  Procession
    DUKAS_183724220_NUR
    ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday Procession
    A penitent, hooded, carries heavy chains and has thorns buried in the skin, taking part in the Good Friday procession, walking through the main streets of the city. The Procession of Engrillados de Atlixco is a main religious tradition in the country, in Atlixco, Mexico, on April 18, 2025. (Photo by Carlos Santiago/Eyepix Group/NurPhoto)

     

  • ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday  Procession
    DUKAS_183724217_NUR
    ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday Procession
    A penitent, hooded, carries heavy chains and has thorns buried in the skin, taking part in the Good Friday procession, walking through the main streets of the city. The Procession of Engrillados de Atlixco is a main religious tradition in the country, in Atlixco, Mexico, on April 18, 2025. (Photo by Carlos Santiago/Eyepix Group/NurPhoto)

     

  • ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday  Procession
    DUKAS_183724214_NUR
    ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday Procession
    A penitent, hooded, carries heavy chains and has thorns buried in the skin, taking part in the Good Friday procession, walking through the main streets of the city. The Procession of Engrillados de Atlixco is a main religious tradition in the country, in Atlixco, Mexico, on April 18, 2025. (Photo by Carlos Santiago/Eyepix Group/NurPhoto)

     

  • ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday  Procession
    DUKAS_183724213_NUR
    ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday Procession
    A penitent, hooded, carries heavy chains and has thorns buried in the skin, taking part in the Good Friday procession, walking through the main streets of the city. The Procession of Engrillados de Atlixco is a main religious tradition in the country, in Atlixco, Mexico, on April 18, 2025. (Photo by Carlos Santiago/Eyepix Group/NurPhoto)

     

  • ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday  Procession
    DUKAS_183724212_NUR
    ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday Procession
    A penitent, hooded, carries heavy chains and has thorns buried in the skin, taking part in the Good Friday procession, walking through the main streets of the city. The Procession of Engrillados de Atlixco is a main religious tradition in the country, in Atlixco, Mexico, on April 18, 2025. (Photo by Carlos Santiago/Eyepix Group/NurPhoto)

     

  • ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday  Procession
    DUKAS_183724211_NUR
    ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday Procession
    A penitent, hooded, carries heavy chains and has thorns buried in the skin, taking part in the Good Friday procession, walking through the main streets of the city. The Procession of Engrillados de Atlixco is a main religious tradition in the country, in Atlixco, Mexico, on April 18, 2025. (Photo by Carlos Santiago/Eyepix Group/NurPhoto)

     

  • ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday  Procession
    DUKAS_183724210_NUR
    ‘Engrillados De Atlixco’ Good Friday Procession
    A penitent, hooded, carries heavy chains and has thorns buried in the skin, taking part in the Good Friday procession, walking through the main streets of the city. The Procession of Engrillados de Atlixco is a main religious tradition in the country, in Atlixco, Mexico, on April 18, 2025. (Photo by Carlos Santiago/Eyepix Group/NurPhoto)

     

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