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DUK10013726_036
PEOPLE - David Bowie im Alter von 69 Jahren gestorben (weitere Bilder
David Bowie and Angie Bowie
1973
Credit all uses
(c) Dukas -
DUKAS_190469609_NUR
Daily Life In Chandigarh
A man wearing glasses looks on in Chandigarh, India, on October 27, 2025. (Photo by Himanshu Bhatt/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_190469565_NUR
Press Conference To Announce Lenskart IPO In Mumbai
A reflection of a digital interface featuring the Lenskart logo is seen in the glasses of an attendee during a press conference by Lenskart Solutions Limited to announce its forthcoming Initial Public Offering (IPO) in Mumbai, India, on October 27, 2025. (Photo by Indranil Aditya/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_190469545_NUR
Press Conference To Announce Lenskart IPO In Mumbai
An attendee checks Lenskart eyewear ahead of the press conference by Lenskart Solutions Limited to announce its forthcoming Initial Public Offering (IPO) in Mumbai, India, on October 27, 2025. (Photo by Indranil Aditya/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_190272236_NUR
Fielmann Storefront
The storefront of Fielmann, a German optical retail chain, is in Schwabach, Franconia, Middle Franconia, Bavaria, Germany, on October 18, 2025. Two pedestrians with a dog walk past the store, which offers eyeglasses and optical services. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_190272234_NUR
Fielmann Storefront
The storefront of Fielmann, a German optical retail chain, is in Schwabach, Franconia, Middle Franconia, Bavaria, Germany, on October 18, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_190228250_FER
Implant to help beat age blindness
Ferrari Press Agency
Blind 1
Ref 17227
21/10/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Science
People with age-related blindness could soon be seeing the world more clearly again — with an eye implant made up of tiny solar cells.
The PRIMA system can restore the central vision in people affected by geographic atrophy, which is a late stage of age-related macular degeneration.
It causes the gradual loss of photoreceptor cells leading to central blindness while leaving peripheral vision mostly intact.
The PRIMA combines , by US startup Science, a small eye implant with external glasses that transmit light and data to the device using embedded solar cells that convert light into electrical signals.
The implant is 2mm square and only 30 micrometers thick.
It contains microscopic electrodes and is surgically placed under the back of the eyeball called the retina where natural photoreceptors have been lost.
The system operates with a pair of glasses.
The glasses capture visual scenes through a small camera mounted at the front, and the images are processed and converted into near-infrared light signals, which are projected onto the implant through the eye’s pupil.
The implant absorbs this infrared light and transforms it into electrical impulses.
These impulses stimulate the remaining retinal cells, which then send signals through the optic nerve to the brain.
The result is the perception of shapes, letters, and objects in the central visual field, restoring the sight of the blind people affected by geographic atrophy.
OPS: An image created by the PRIMA system (right) compared to the standard image taken by the linked camra (left)
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_190228249_FER
Implant to help beat age blindness
Ferrari Press Agency
Blind 1
Ref 17227
21/10/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Science
People with age-related blindness could soon be seeing the world more clearly again — with an eye implant made up of tiny solar cells.
The PRIMA system can restore the central vision in people affected by geographic atrophy, which is a late stage of age-related macular degeneration.
It causes the gradual loss of photoreceptor cells leading to central blindness while leaving peripheral vision mostly intact.
The PRIMA combines , by US startup Science, a small eye implant with external glasses that transmit light and data to the device using embedded solar cells that convert light into electrical signals.
The implant is 2mm square and only 30 micrometers thick.
It contains microscopic electrodes and is surgically placed under the back of the eyeball called the retina where natural photoreceptors have been lost.
The system operates with a pair of glasses.
The glasses capture visual scenes through a small camera mounted at the front, and the images are processed and converted into near-infrared light signals, which are projected onto the implant through the eye’s pupil.
The implant absorbs this infrared light and transforms it into electrical impulses.
These impulses stimulate the remaining retinal cells, which then send signals through the optic nerve to the brain.
The result is the perception of shapes, letters, and objects in the central visual field, restoring the sight of the blind people affected by geographic atrophy.
OPS: A pair of glasses with the the PRIMA system device attached
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_190228248_FER
Implant to help beat age blindness
Ferrari Press Agency
Blind 1
Ref 17227
21/10/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Science
People with age-related blindness could soon be seeing the world more clearly again — with an eye implant made up of tiny solar cells.
The PRIMA system can restore the central vision in people affected by geographic atrophy, which is a late stage of age-related macular degeneration.
It causes the gradual loss of photoreceptor cells leading to central blindness while leaving peripheral vision mostly intact.
The PRIMA combines , by US startup Science, a small eye implant with external glasses that transmit light and data to the device using embedded solar cells that convert light into electrical signals.
The implant is 2mm square and only 30 micrometers thick.
It contains microscopic electrodes and is surgically placed under the back of the eyeball called the retina where natural photoreceptors have been lost.
The system operates with a pair of glasses.
The glasses capture visual scenes through a small camera mounted at the front, and the images are processed and converted into near-infrared light signals, which are projected onto the implant through the eye’s pupil.
The implant absorbs this infrared light and transforms it into electrical impulses.
These impulses stimulate the remaining retinal cells, which then send signals through the optic nerve to the brain.
The result is the perception of shapes, letters, and objects in the central visual field, restoring the sight of the blind people affected by geographic atrophy.
OPS: An image created by the PRIMA system (right) compared to the standard image taken by the linked camra (left)
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_190228247_FER
Implant to help beat age blindness
Ferrari Press Agency
Blind 1
Ref 17227
21/10/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Science
People with age-related blindness could soon be seeing the world more clearly again — with an eye implant made up of tiny solar cells.
The PRIMA system can restore the central vision in people affected by geographic atrophy, which is a late stage of age-related macular degeneration.
It causes the gradual loss of photoreceptor cells leading to central blindness while leaving peripheral vision mostly intact.
The PRIMA combines , by US startup Science, a small eye implant with external glasses that transmit light and data to the device using embedded solar cells that convert light into electrical signals.
The implant is 2mm square and only 30 micrometers thick.
It contains microscopic electrodes and is surgically placed under the back of the eyeball called the retina where natural photoreceptors have been lost.
The system operates with a pair of glasses.
The glasses capture visual scenes through a small camera mounted at the front, and the images are processed and converted into near-infrared light signals, which are projected onto the implant through the eye’s pupil.
The implant absorbs this infrared light and transforms it into electrical impulses.
These impulses stimulate the remaining retinal cells, which then send signals through the optic nerve to the brain.
The result is the perception of shapes, letters, and objects in the central visual field, restoring the sight of the blind people affected by geographic atrophy.
OPS: A pair of glasses with the the PRIMA system device attached
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_190228246_FER
Implant to help beat age blindness
Ferrari Press Agency
Blind 1
Ref 17227
21/10/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Science
People with age-related blindness could soon be seeing the world more clearly again — with an eye implant made up of tiny solar cells.
The PRIMA system can restore the central vision in people affected by geographic atrophy, which is a late stage of age-related macular degeneration.
It causes the gradual loss of photoreceptor cells leading to central blindness while leaving peripheral vision mostly intact.
The PRIMA combines , by US startup Science, a small eye implant with external glasses that transmit light and data to the device using embedded solar cells that convert light into electrical signals.
The implant is 2mm square and only 30 micrometers thick.
It contains microscopic electrodes and is surgically placed under the back of the eyeball called the retina where natural photoreceptors have been lost.
The system operates with a pair of glasses.
The glasses capture visual scenes through a small camera mounted at the front, and the images are processed and converted into near-infrared light signals, which are projected onto the implant through the eye’s pupil.
The implant absorbs this infrared light and transforms it into electrical impulses.
These impulses stimulate the remaining retinal cells, which then send signals through the optic nerve to the brain.
The result is the perception of shapes, letters, and objects in the central visual field, restoring the sight of the blind people affected by geographic atrophy.
OPS: A pair of glasses with the the PRIMA system device attached
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_190228245_FER
Implant to help beat age blindness
Ferrari Press Agency
Blind 1
Ref 17227
21/10/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Science
People with age-related blindness could soon be seeing the world more clearly again — with an eye implant made up of tiny solar cells.
The PRIMA system can restore the central vision in people affected by geographic atrophy, which is a late stage of age-related macular degeneration.
It causes the gradual loss of photoreceptor cells leading to central blindness while leaving peripheral vision mostly intact.
The PRIMA combines , by US startup Science, a small eye implant with external glasses that transmit light and data to the device using embedded solar cells that convert light into electrical signals.
The implant is 2mm square and only 30 micrometers thick.
It contains microscopic electrodes and is surgically placed under the back of the eyeball called the retina where natural photoreceptors have been lost.
The system operates with a pair of glasses.
The glasses capture visual scenes through a small camera mounted at the front, and the images are processed and converted into near-infrared light signals, which are projected onto the implant through the eye’s pupil.
The implant absorbs this infrared light and transforms it into electrical impulses.
These impulses stimulate the remaining retinal cells, which then send signals through the optic nerve to the brain.
The result is the perception of shapes, letters, and objects in the central visual field, restoring the sight of the blind people affected by geographic atrophy.
OPS: A pair of glasses with the the PRIMA system device attached
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_190228244_FER
Implant to help beat age blindness
Ferrari Press Agency
Blind 1
Ref 17227
21/10/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Science
People with age-related blindness could soon be seeing the world more clearly again — with an eye implant made up of tiny solar cells.
The PRIMA system can restore the central vision in people affected by geographic atrophy, which is a late stage of age-related macular degeneration.
It causes the gradual loss of photoreceptor cells leading to central blindness while leaving peripheral vision mostly intact.
The PRIMA combines , by US startup Science, a small eye implant with external glasses that transmit light and data to the device using embedded solar cells that convert light into electrical signals.
The implant is 2mm square and only 30 micrometers thick.
It contains microscopic electrodes and is surgically placed under the back of the eyeball called the retina where natural photoreceptors have been lost.
The system operates with a pair of glasses.
The glasses capture visual scenes through a small camera mounted at the front, and the images are processed and converted into near-infrared light signals, which are projected onto the implant through the eye’s pupil.
The implant absorbs this infrared light and transforms it into electrical impulses.
These impulses stimulate the remaining retinal cells, which then send signals through the optic nerve to the brain.
The result is the perception of shapes, letters, and objects in the central visual field, restoring the sight of the blind people affected by geographic atrophy.
OPS: An image created by the PRIMA system (right) compared to the standard image taken by the linked camra (left)
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_190228243_FER
Implant to help beat age blindness
Ferrari Press Agency
Blind 1
Ref 17227
21/10/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Science
People with age-related blindness could soon be seeing the world more clearly again — with an eye implant made up of tiny solar cells.
The PRIMA system can restore the central vision in people affected by geographic atrophy, which is a late stage of age-related macular degeneration.
It causes the gradual loss of photoreceptor cells leading to central blindness while leaving peripheral vision mostly intact.
The PRIMA combines , by US startup Science, a small eye implant with external glasses that transmit light and data to the device using embedded solar cells that convert light into electrical signals.
The implant is 2mm square and only 30 micrometers thick.
It contains microscopic electrodes and is surgically placed under the back of the eyeball called the retina where natural photoreceptors have been lost.
The system operates with a pair of glasses.
The glasses capture visual scenes through a small camera mounted at the front, and the images are processed and converted into near-infrared light signals, which are projected onto the implant through the eye’s pupil.
The implant absorbs this infrared light and transforms it into electrical impulses.
These impulses stimulate the remaining retinal cells, which then send signals through the optic nerve to the brain.
The result is the perception of shapes, letters, and objects in the central visual field, restoring the sight of the blind people affected by geographic atrophy.
OPS: A pair of glasses with the the PRIMA system device attached
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_190228242_FER
Implant to help beat age blindness
Ferrari Press Agency
Blind 1
Ref 17227
21/10/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Science
People with age-related blindness could soon be seeing the world more clearly again — with an eye implant made up of tiny solar cells.
The PRIMA system can restore the central vision in people affected by geographic atrophy, which is a late stage of age-related macular degeneration.
It causes the gradual loss of photoreceptor cells leading to central blindness while leaving peripheral vision mostly intact.
The PRIMA combines , by US startup Science, a small eye implant with external glasses that transmit light and data to the device using embedded solar cells that convert light into electrical signals.
The implant is 2mm square and only 30 micrometers thick.
It contains microscopic electrodes and is surgically placed under the back of the eyeball called the retina where natural photoreceptors have been lost.
The system operates with a pair of glasses.
The glasses capture visual scenes through a small camera mounted at the front, and the images are processed and converted into near-infrared light signals, which are projected onto the implant through the eye’s pupil.
The implant absorbs this infrared light and transforms it into electrical impulses.
These impulses stimulate the remaining retinal cells, which then send signals through the optic nerve to the brain.
The result is the perception of shapes, letters, and objects in the central visual field, restoring the sight of the blind people affected by geographic atrophy.
OPS: A pair of glasses with the the PRIMA system device attached
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_190228241_FER
Implant to help beat age blindness
Ferrari Press Agency
Blind 1
Ref 17227
21/10/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Science
People with age-related blindness could soon be seeing the world more clearly again — with an eye implant made up of tiny solar cells.
The PRIMA system can restore the central vision in people affected by geographic atrophy, which is a late stage of age-related macular degeneration.
It causes the gradual loss of photoreceptor cells leading to central blindness while leaving peripheral vision mostly intact.
The PRIMA combines , by US startup Science, a small eye implant with external glasses that transmit light and data to the device using embedded solar cells that convert light into electrical signals.
The implant is 2mm square and only 30 micrometers thick.
It contains microscopic electrodes and is surgically placed under the back of the eyeball called the retina where natural photoreceptors have been lost.
The system operates with a pair of glasses.
The glasses capture visual scenes through a small camera mounted at the front, and the images are processed and converted into near-infrared light signals, which are projected onto the implant through the eye’s pupil.
The implant absorbs this infrared light and transforms it into electrical impulses.
These impulses stimulate the remaining retinal cells, which then send signals through the optic nerve to the brain.
The result is the perception of shapes, letters, and objects in the central visual field, restoring the sight of the blind people affected by geographic atrophy.
OPS: An image created by the PRIMA system (right) compared to the standard image taken by the linked camra (left)
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_190228240_FER
Implant to help beat age blindness
Ferrari Press Agency
Blind 1
Ref 17227
21/10/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Science
People with age-related blindness could soon be seeing the world more clearly again — with an eye implant made up of tiny solar cells.
The PRIMA system can restore the central vision in people affected by geographic atrophy, which is a late stage of age-related macular degeneration.
It causes the gradual loss of photoreceptor cells leading to central blindness while leaving peripheral vision mostly intact.
The PRIMA combines , by US startup Science, a small eye implant with external glasses that transmit light and data to the device using embedded solar cells that convert light into electrical signals.
The implant is 2mm square and only 30 micrometers thick.
It contains microscopic electrodes and is surgically placed under the back of the eyeball called the retina where natural photoreceptors have been lost.
The system operates with a pair of glasses.
The glasses capture visual scenes through a small camera mounted at the front, and the images are processed and converted into near-infrared light signals, which are projected onto the implant through the eye’s pupil.
The implant absorbs this infrared light and transforms it into electrical impulses.
These impulses stimulate the remaining retinal cells, which then send signals through the optic nerve to the brain.
The result is the perception of shapes, letters, and objects in the central visual field, restoring the sight of the blind people affected by geographic atrophy.
OPS: A pair of glasses with the the PRIMA system device attached
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_190228239_FER
Implant to help beat age blindness
Ferrari Press Agency
Blind 1
Ref 17227
21/10/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Science
People with age-related blindness could soon be seeing the world more clearly again — with an eye implant made up of tiny solar cells.
The PRIMA system can restore the central vision in people affected by geographic atrophy, which is a late stage of age-related macular degeneration.
It causes the gradual loss of photoreceptor cells leading to central blindness while leaving peripheral vision mostly intact.
The PRIMA combines , by US startup Science, a small eye implant with external glasses that transmit light and data to the device using embedded solar cells that convert light into electrical signals.
The implant is 2mm square and only 30 micrometers thick.
It contains microscopic electrodes and is surgically placed under the back of the eyeball called the retina where natural photoreceptors have been lost.
The system operates with a pair of glasses.
The glasses capture visual scenes through a small camera mounted at the front, and the images are processed and converted into near-infrared light signals, which are projected onto the implant through the eye’s pupil.
The implant absorbs this infrared light and transforms it into electrical impulses.
These impulses stimulate the remaining retinal cells, which then send signals through the optic nerve to the brain.
The result is the perception of shapes, letters, and objects in the central visual field, restoring the sight of the blind people affected by geographic atrophy.
OPS: A pair of glasses with the the PRIMA system device attached
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_190228238_FER
Implant to help beat age blindness
Ferrari Press Agency
Blind 1
Ref 17227
21/10/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Science
People with age-related blindness could soon be seeing the world more clearly again — with an eye implant made up of tiny solar cells.
The PRIMA system can restore the central vision in people affected by geographic atrophy, which is a late stage of age-related macular degeneration.
It causes the gradual loss of photoreceptor cells leading to central blindness while leaving peripheral vision mostly intact.
The PRIMA combines , by US startup Science, a small eye implant with external glasses that transmit light and data to the device using embedded solar cells that convert light into electrical signals.
The implant is 2mm square and only 30 micrometers thick.
It contains microscopic electrodes and is surgically placed under the back of the eyeball called the retina where natural photoreceptors have been lost.
The system operates with a pair of glasses.
The glasses capture visual scenes through a small camera mounted at the front, and the images are processed and converted into near-infrared light signals, which are projected onto the implant through the eye’s pupil.
The implant absorbs this infrared light and transforms it into electrical impulses.
These impulses stimulate the remaining retinal cells, which then send signals through the optic nerve to the brain.
The result is the perception of shapes, letters, and objects in the central visual field, restoring the sight of the blind people affected by geographic atrophy.
OPS The PRIMA eye implant being inserted into a patient.
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_190228237_FER
Implant to help beat age blindness
Ferrari Press Agency
Blind 1
Ref 17227
21/10/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Science
People with age-related blindness could soon be seeing the world more clearly again — with an eye implant made up of tiny solar cells.
The PRIMA system can restore the central vision in people affected by geographic atrophy, which is a late stage of age-related macular degeneration.
It causes the gradual loss of photoreceptor cells leading to central blindness while leaving peripheral vision mostly intact.
The PRIMA combines , by US startup Science, a small eye implant with external glasses that transmit light and data to the device using embedded solar cells that convert light into electrical signals.
The implant is 2mm square and only 30 micrometers thick.
It contains microscopic electrodes and is surgically placed under the back of the eyeball called the retina where natural photoreceptors have been lost.
The system operates with a pair of glasses.
The glasses capture visual scenes through a small camera mounted at the front, and the images are processed and converted into near-infrared light signals, which are projected onto the implant through the eye’s pupil.
The implant absorbs this infrared light and transforms it into electrical impulses.
These impulses stimulate the remaining retinal cells, which then send signals through the optic nerve to the brain.
The result is the perception of shapes, letters, and objects in the central visual field, restoring the sight of the blind people affected by geographic atrophy.
OPS: A pair of glasses with the the PRIMA system device attached
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_190228236_FER
Implant to help beat age blindness
Ferrari Press Agency
Blind 1
Ref 17227
21/10/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Science
People with age-related blindness could soon be seeing the world more clearly again — with an eye implant made up of tiny solar cells.
The PRIMA system can restore the central vision in people affected by geographic atrophy, which is a late stage of age-related macular degeneration.
It causes the gradual loss of photoreceptor cells leading to central blindness while leaving peripheral vision mostly intact.
The PRIMA combines , by US startup Science, a small eye implant with external glasses that transmit light and data to the device using embedded solar cells that convert light into electrical signals.
The implant is 2mm square and only 30 micrometers thick.
It contains microscopic electrodes and is surgically placed under the back of the eyeball called the retina where natural photoreceptors have been lost.
The system operates with a pair of glasses.
The glasses capture visual scenes through a small camera mounted at the front, and the images are processed and converted into near-infrared light signals, which are projected onto the implant through the eye’s pupil.
The implant absorbs this infrared light and transforms it into electrical impulses.
These impulses stimulate the remaining retinal cells, which then send signals through the optic nerve to the brain.
The result is the perception of shapes, letters, and objects in the central visual field, restoring the sight of the blind people affected by geographic atrophy.
OPS: Diagram of the PRIMA eye implant being inserted at the back of the retina.
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_190228235_FER
Implant to help beat age blindness
Ferrari Press Agency
Blind 1
Ref 17227
21/10/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Science
People with age-related blindness could soon be seeing the world more clearly again — with an eye implant made up of tiny solar cells.
The PRIMA system can restore the central vision in people affected by geographic atrophy, which is a late stage of age-related macular degeneration.
It causes the gradual loss of photoreceptor cells leading to central blindness while leaving peripheral vision mostly intact.
The PRIMA combines , by US startup Science, a small eye implant with external glasses that transmit light and data to the device using embedded solar cells that convert light into electrical signals.
The implant is 2mm square and only 30 micrometers thick.
It contains microscopic electrodes and is surgically placed under the back of the eyeball called the retina where natural photoreceptors have been lost.
The system operates with a pair of glasses.
The glasses capture visual scenes through a small camera mounted at the front, and the images are processed and converted into near-infrared light signals, which are projected onto the implant through the eye’s pupil.
The implant absorbs this infrared light and transforms it into electrical impulses.
These impulses stimulate the remaining retinal cells, which then send signals through the optic nerve to the brain.
The result is the perception of shapes, letters, and objects in the central visual field, restoring the sight of the blind people affected by geographic atrophy.
OPS: A pair of glasses with the the PRIMA system device attached
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_190228234_FER
Implant to help beat age blindness
Ferrari Press Agency
Blind 1
Ref 17227
21/10/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Science
People with age-related blindness could soon be seeing the world more clearly again — with an eye implant made up of tiny solar cells.
The PRIMA system can restore the central vision in people affected by geographic atrophy, which is a late stage of age-related macular degeneration.
It causes the gradual loss of photoreceptor cells leading to central blindness while leaving peripheral vision mostly intact.
The PRIMA combines , by US startup Science, a small eye implant with external glasses that transmit light and data to the device using embedded solar cells that convert light into electrical signals.
The implant is 2mm square and only 30 micrometers thick.
It contains microscopic electrodes and is surgically placed under the back of the eyeball called the retina where natural photoreceptors have been lost.
The system operates with a pair of glasses.
The glasses capture visual scenes through a small camera mounted at the front, and the images are processed and converted into near-infrared light signals, which are projected onto the implant through the eye’s pupil.
The implant absorbs this infrared light and transforms it into electrical impulses.
These impulses stimulate the remaining retinal cells, which then send signals through the optic nerve to the brain.
The result is the perception of shapes, letters, and objects in the central visual field, restoring the sight of the blind people affected by geographic atrophy.
OPS: Making a PRIMA eye implant in the lab.
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_190228233_FER
Implant to help beat age blindness
Ferrari Press Agency
Blind 1
Ref 17227
21/10/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Science
People with age-related blindness could soon be seeing the world more clearly again — with an eye implant made up of tiny solar cells.
The PRIMA system can restore the central vision in people affected by geographic atrophy, which is a late stage of age-related macular degeneration.
It causes the gradual loss of photoreceptor cells leading to central blindness while leaving peripheral vision mostly intact.
The PRIMA combines , by US startup Science, a small eye implant with external glasses that transmit light and data to the device using embedded solar cells that convert light into electrical signals.
The implant is 2mm square and only 30 micrometers thick.
It contains microscopic electrodes and is surgically placed under the back of the eyeball called the retina where natural photoreceptors have been lost.
The system operates with a pair of glasses.
The glasses capture visual scenes through a small camera mounted at the front, and the images are processed and converted into near-infrared light signals, which are projected onto the implant through the eye’s pupil.
The implant absorbs this infrared light and transforms it into electrical impulses.
These impulses stimulate the remaining retinal cells, which then send signals through the optic nerve to the brain.
The result is the perception of shapes, letters, and objects in the central visual field, restoring the sight of the blind people affected by geographic atrophy.
OPS: The PRIMA system eye implant
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_190228232_FER
Implant to help beat age blindness
Ferrari Press Agency
Blind 1
Ref 17227
21/10/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Science
People with age-related blindness could soon be seeing the world more clearly again — with an eye implant made up of tiny solar cells.
The PRIMA system can restore the central vision in people affected by geographic atrophy, which is a late stage of age-related macular degeneration.
It causes the gradual loss of photoreceptor cells leading to central blindness while leaving peripheral vision mostly intact.
The PRIMA combines , by US startup Science, a small eye implant with external glasses that transmit light and data to the device using embedded solar cells that convert light into electrical signals.
The implant is 2mm square and only 30 micrometers thick.
It contains microscopic electrodes and is surgically placed under the back of the eyeball called the retina where natural photoreceptors have been lost.
The system operates with a pair of glasses.
The glasses capture visual scenes through a small camera mounted at the front, and the images are processed and converted into near-infrared light signals, which are projected onto the implant through the eye’s pupil.
The implant absorbs this infrared light and transforms it into electrical impulses.
These impulses stimulate the remaining retinal cells, which then send signals through the optic nerve to the brain.
The result is the perception of shapes, letters, and objects in the central visual field, restoring the sight of the blind people affected by geographic atrophy.
OPS: The condition of geographic atrophy blanks out the centre of the eye's vision
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_190034509_ZUM
Diane Keaton American Actress
April 12, 2012 - Hollywood, California, U.S. - Actress DIANE KEATON promotes 'Darling Companion' in Los Angeles. (Credit Image: © Armando Gallo/ZUMA Studio (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
Arga Images -
DUKAS_189947431_FER
John Lennon Lost Weekend glasses for sale
Ferrari Press Agency
Lennon 1
Ref 17208
14/10/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Propstore
A pair of John Lennon’s tinted prescription glasses worn during his 18n month split from wife Yoko Ono in the early Seventies are set to fetch up to £300,000 GBP / €344.500 euros at auction.
And also up for grabs is a cheeky parody of the Turin Shroud
Lennon had the spectacles for his so-called 18-month-long “lost weekend” in Los Angeles between 1973 and 1975,
During that time he had a relationship with his and Yoko’s assistant, May Pang.
Despite the name, it was a surprisingly productive period musically, mixed with heavy drinking and wild antics in Los Angeles.
The ex-Beatle indulged in a lifestyle of heavy drinking and partying with a group of friends that included singer Harry Nilsson and rocker Alice Cooper.
They infamously called themselves the Hollywood Vampires.
Lennon was last seen in the specs now up for sale on March 12, 1974, when he and Nilsson were drinking at the Troubadour Club in Los Angeles.
The pair wound up in a scuffle in which Lennon lost his glasses.
They reportedly ended up with the wife of US entertainer Tommy Smothers, one half of the Smothers Brothers duo who were performing at the club that night,
Lennon also rocked the specs on the cover of his Mind Games single and in other photographs throughout the period.
OPS: John Lennon's Shroud of Tourin whch is also up for sale at the auction.
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_189947430_FER
John Lennon Lost Weekend glasses for sale
Ferrari Press Agency
Lennon 1
Ref 17208
14/10/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Propstore
A pair of John Lennon’s tinted prescription glasses worn during his 18n month split from wife Yoko Ono in the early Seventies are set to fetch up to £300,000 GBP / €344.500 euros at auction.
And also up for grabs is a cheeky parody of the Turin Shroud
Lennon had the spectacles for his so-called 18-month-long “lost weekend” in Los Angeles between 1973 and 1975,
During that time he had a relationship with his and Yoko’s assistant, May Pang.
Despite the name, it was a surprisingly productive period musically, mixed with heavy drinking and wild antics in Los Angeles.
The ex-Beatle indulged in a lifestyle of heavy drinking and partying with a group of friends that included singer Harry Nilsson and rocker Alice Cooper.
They infamously called themselves the Hollywood Vampires.
Lennon was last seen in the specs now up for sale on March 12, 1974, when he and Nilsson were drinking at the Troubadour Club in Los Angeles.
The pair wound up in a scuffle in which Lennon lost his glasses.
They reportedly ended up with the wife of US entertainer Tommy Smothers, one half of the Smothers Brothers duo who were performing at the club that night,
Lennon also rocked the specs on the cover of his Mind Games single and in other photographs throughout the period.
OPS: John Lennon's Shroud of Tourin whch is also up for sale at the auction.
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_189947429_FER
John Lennon Lost Weekend glasses for sale
Ferrari Press Agency
Lennon 1
Ref 17208
14/10/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Propstore
A pair of John Lennon’s tinted prescription glasses worn during his 18n month split from wife Yoko Ono in the early Seventies are set to fetch up to £300,000 GBP / €344.500 euros at auction.
And also up for grabs is a cheeky parody of the Turin Shroud
Lennon had the spectacles for his so-called 18-month-long “lost weekend” in Los Angeles between 1973 and 1975,
During that time he had a relationship with his and Yoko’s assistant, May Pang.
Despite the name, it was a surprisingly productive period musically, mixed with heavy drinking and wild antics in Los Angeles.
The ex-Beatle indulged in a lifestyle of heavy drinking and partying with a group of friends that included singer Harry Nilsson and rocker Alice Cooper.
They infamously called themselves the Hollywood Vampires.
Lennon was last seen in the specs now up for sale on March 12, 1974, when he and Nilsson were drinking at the Troubadour Club in Los Angeles.
The pair wound up in a scuffle in which Lennon lost his glasses.
They reportedly ended up with the wife of US entertainer Tommy Smothers, one half of the Smothers Brothers duo who were performing at the club that night,
Lennon also rocked the specs on the cover of his Mind Games single and in other photographs throughout the period.
OPS: John Lennon's Shroud of Tourin whch is also up for sale at the auction.
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_189947428_FER
John Lennon Lost Weekend glasses for sale
Ferrari Press Agency
Lennon 1
Ref 17208
14/10/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Propstore
A pair of John Lennon’s tinted prescription glasses worn during his 18n month split from wife Yoko Ono in the early Seventies are set to fetch up to £300,000 GBP / €344.500 euros at auction.
And also up for grabs is a cheeky parody of the Turin Shroud
Lennon had the spectacles for his so-called 18-month-long “lost weekend” in Los Angeles between 1973 and 1975,
During that time he had a relationship with his and Yoko’s assistant, May Pang.
Despite the name, it was a surprisingly productive period musically, mixed with heavy drinking and wild antics in Los Angeles.
The ex-Beatle indulged in a lifestyle of heavy drinking and partying with a group of friends that included singer Harry Nilsson and rocker Alice Cooper.
They infamously called themselves the Hollywood Vampires.
Lennon was last seen in the specs now up for sale on March 12, 1974, when he and Nilsson were drinking at the Troubadour Club in Los Angeles.
The pair wound up in a scuffle in which Lennon lost his glasses.
They reportedly ended up with the wife of US entertainer Tommy Smothers, one half of the Smothers Brothers duo who were performing at the club that night,
Lennon also rocked the specs on the cover of his Mind Games single and in other photographs throughout the period.
OPS: John Lennon's Shroud of Tourin whch is also up for sale at the auction.
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_189947427_FER
John Lennon Lost Weekend glasses for sale
Ferrari Press Agency
Lennon 1
Ref 17208
14/10/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Propstore
A pair of John Lennon’s tinted prescription glasses worn during his 18n month split from wife Yoko Ono in the early Seventies are set to fetch up to £300,000 GBP / €344.500 euros at auction.
And also up for grabs is a cheeky parody of the Turin Shroud
Lennon had the spectacles for his so-called 18-month-long “lost weekend” in Los Angeles between 1973 and 1975,
During that time he had a relationship with his and Yoko’s assistant, May Pang.
Despite the name, it was a surprisingly productive period musically, mixed with heavy drinking and wild antics in Los Angeles.
The ex-Beatle indulged in a lifestyle of heavy drinking and partying with a group of friends that included singer Harry Nilsson and rocker Alice Cooper.
They infamously called themselves the Hollywood Vampires.
Lennon was last seen in the specs now up for sale on March 12, 1974, when he and Nilsson were drinking at the Troubadour Club in Los Angeles.
The pair wound up in a scuffle in which Lennon lost his glasses.
They reportedly ended up with the wife of US entertainer Tommy Smothers, one half of the Smothers Brothers duo who were performing at the club that night,
Lennon also rocked the specs on the cover of his Mind Games single and in other photographs throughout the period.
OPS: John Lennon's Lost Weekend glasses
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_189947426_FER
John Lennon Lost Weekend glasses for sale
Ferrari Press Agency
Lennon 1
Ref 17208
14/10/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Propstore
A pair of John Lennon’s tinted prescription glasses worn during his 18n month split from wife Yoko Ono in the early Seventies are set to fetch up to £300,000 GBP / €344.500 euros at auction.
And also up for grabs is a cheeky parody of the Turin Shroud
Lennon had the spectacles for his so-called 18-month-long “lost weekend” in Los Angeles between 1973 and 1975,
During that time he had a relationship with his and Yoko’s assistant, May Pang.
Despite the name, it was a surprisingly productive period musically, mixed with heavy drinking and wild antics in Los Angeles.
The ex-Beatle indulged in a lifestyle of heavy drinking and partying with a group of friends that included singer Harry Nilsson and rocker Alice Cooper.
They infamously called themselves the Hollywood Vampires.
Lennon was last seen in the specs now up for sale on March 12, 1974, when he and Nilsson were drinking at the Troubadour Club in Los Angeles.
The pair wound up in a scuffle in which Lennon lost his glasses.
They reportedly ended up with the wife of US entertainer Tommy Smothers, one half of the Smothers Brothers duo who were performing at the club that night,
Lennon also rocked the specs on the cover of his Mind Games single and in other photographs throughout the period.
OPS: John Lennon's Lost Weekend glasses
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_189947425_FER
John Lennon Lost Weekend glasses for sale
Ferrari Press Agency
Lennon 1
Ref 17208
14/10/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Propstore
A pair of John Lennon’s tinted prescription glasses worn during his 18n month split from wife Yoko Ono in the early Seventies are set to fetch up to £300,000 GBP / €344.500 euros at auction.
And also up for grabs is a cheeky parody of the Turin Shroud
Lennon had the spectacles for his so-called 18-month-long “lost weekend” in Los Angeles between 1973 and 1975,
During that time he had a relationship with his and Yoko’s assistant, May Pang.
Despite the name, it was a surprisingly productive period musically, mixed with heavy drinking and wild antics in Los Angeles.
The ex-Beatle indulged in a lifestyle of heavy drinking and partying with a group of friends that included singer Harry Nilsson and rocker Alice Cooper.
They infamously called themselves the Hollywood Vampires.
Lennon was last seen in the specs now up for sale on March 12, 1974, when he and Nilsson were drinking at the Troubadour Club in Los Angeles.
The pair wound up in a scuffle in which Lennon lost his glasses.
They reportedly ended up with the wife of US entertainer Tommy Smothers, one half of the Smothers Brothers duo who were performing at the club that night,
Lennon also rocked the specs on the cover of his Mind Games single and in other photographs throughout the period.
OPS: John Lennon's Lost Weekend glasses
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_189947424_FER
John Lennon Lost Weekend glasses for sale
Ferrari Press Agency
Lennon 1
Ref 17208
14/10/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Propstore
A pair of John Lennon’s tinted prescription glasses worn during his 18n month split from wife Yoko Ono in the early Seventies are set to fetch up to £300,000 GBP / €344.500 euros at auction.
And also up for grabs is a cheeky parody of the Turin Shroud
Lennon had the spectacles for his so-called 18-month-long “lost weekend” in Los Angeles between 1973 and 1975,
During that time he had a relationship with his and Yoko’s assistant, May Pang.
Despite the name, it was a surprisingly productive period musically, mixed with heavy drinking and wild antics in Los Angeles.
The ex-Beatle indulged in a lifestyle of heavy drinking and partying with a group of friends that included singer Harry Nilsson and rocker Alice Cooper.
They infamously called themselves the Hollywood Vampires.
Lennon was last seen in the specs now up for sale on March 12, 1974, when he and Nilsson were drinking at the Troubadour Club in Los Angeles.
The pair wound up in a scuffle in which Lennon lost his glasses.
They reportedly ended up with the wife of US entertainer Tommy Smothers, one half of the Smothers Brothers duo who were performing at the club that night,
Lennon also rocked the specs on the cover of his Mind Games single and in other photographs throughout the period.
OPS: John Lennon's Lost Weekend glasses
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_189947423_FER
John Lennon Lost Weekend glasses for sale
Ferrari Press Agency
Lennon 1
Ref 17208
14/10/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Propstore
A pair of John Lennon’s tinted prescription glasses worn during his 18n month split from wife Yoko Ono in the early Seventies are set to fetch up to £300,000 GBP / €344.500 euros at auction.
And also up for grabs is a cheeky parody of the Turin Shroud
Lennon had the spectacles for his so-called 18-month-long “lost weekend” in Los Angeles between 1973 and 1975,
During that time he had a relationship with his and Yoko’s assistant, May Pang.
Despite the name, it was a surprisingly productive period musically, mixed with heavy drinking and wild antics in Los Angeles.
The ex-Beatle indulged in a lifestyle of heavy drinking and partying with a group of friends that included singer Harry Nilsson and rocker Alice Cooper.
They infamously called themselves the Hollywood Vampires.
Lennon was last seen in the specs now up for sale on March 12, 1974, when he and Nilsson were drinking at the Troubadour Club in Los Angeles.
The pair wound up in a scuffle in which Lennon lost his glasses.
They reportedly ended up with the wife of US entertainer Tommy Smothers, one half of the Smothers Brothers duo who were performing at the club that night,
Lennon also rocked the specs on the cover of his Mind Games single and in other photographs throughout the period.
OPS: John Lennon's Lost Weekend glasses
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_189947422_FER
John Lennon Lost Weekend glasses for sale
Ferrari Press Agency
Lennon 1
Ref 17208
14/10/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Propstore
A pair of John Lennon’s tinted prescription glasses worn during his 18n month split from wife Yoko Ono in the early Seventies are set to fetch up to £300,000 GBP / €344.500 euros at auction.
And also up for grabs is a cheeky parody of the Turin Shroud
Lennon had the spectacles for his so-called 18-month-long “lost weekend” in Los Angeles between 1973 and 1975,
During that time he had a relationship with his and Yoko’s assistant, May Pang.
Despite the name, it was a surprisingly productive period musically, mixed with heavy drinking and wild antics in Los Angeles.
The ex-Beatle indulged in a lifestyle of heavy drinking and partying with a group of friends that included singer Harry Nilsson and rocker Alice Cooper.
They infamously called themselves the Hollywood Vampires.
Lennon was last seen in the specs now up for sale on March 12, 1974, when he and Nilsson were drinking at the Troubadour Club in Los Angeles.
The pair wound up in a scuffle in which Lennon lost his glasses.
They reportedly ended up with the wife of US entertainer Tommy Smothers, one half of the Smothers Brothers duo who were performing at the club that night,
Lennon also rocked the specs on the cover of his Mind Games single and in other photographs throughout the period.
OPS: John Lennon's Lost Weekend glasses
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_189947421_FER
John Lennon Lost Weekend glasses for sale
Ferrari Press Agency
Lennon 1
Ref 17208
14/10/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Propstore
A pair of John Lennon’s tinted prescription glasses worn during his 18n month split from wife Yoko Ono in the early Seventies are set to fetch up to £300,000 GBP / €344.500 euros at auction.
And also up for grabs is a cheeky parody of the Turin Shroud
Lennon had the spectacles for his so-called 18-month-long “lost weekend” in Los Angeles between 1973 and 1975,
During that time he had a relationship with his and Yoko’s assistant, May Pang.
Despite the name, it was a surprisingly productive period musically, mixed with heavy drinking and wild antics in Los Angeles.
The ex-Beatle indulged in a lifestyle of heavy drinking and partying with a group of friends that included singer Harry Nilsson and rocker Alice Cooper.
They infamously called themselves the Hollywood Vampires.
Lennon was last seen in the specs now up for sale on March 12, 1974, when he and Nilsson were drinking at the Troubadour Club in Los Angeles.
The pair wound up in a scuffle in which Lennon lost his glasses.
They reportedly ended up with the wife of US entertainer Tommy Smothers, one half of the Smothers Brothers duo who were performing at the club that night,
Lennon also rocked the specs on the cover of his Mind Games single and in other photographs throughout the period.
OPS: John Lennon's Lost Weekend glasses
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_189947420_FER
John Lennon Lost Weekend glasses for sale
Ferrari Press Agency
Lennon 1
Ref 17208
14/10/2025
See Ferrari text
Picture MUST credit: Propstore
A pair of John Lennon’s tinted prescription glasses worn during his 18n month split from wife Yoko Ono in the early Seventies are set to fetch up to £300,000 GBP / €344.500 euros at auction.
And also up for grabs is a cheeky parody of the Turin Shroud
Lennon had the spectacles for his so-called 18-month-long “lost weekend” in Los Angeles between 1973 and 1975,
During that time he had a relationship with his and Yoko’s assistant, May Pang.
Despite the name, it was a surprisingly productive period musically, mixed with heavy drinking and wild antics in Los Angeles.
The ex-Beatle indulged in a lifestyle of heavy drinking and partying with a group of friends that included singer Harry Nilsson and rocker Alice Cooper.
They infamously called themselves the Hollywood Vampires.
Lennon was last seen in the specs now up for sale on March 12, 1974, when he and Nilsson were drinking at the Troubadour Club in Los Angeles.
The pair wound up in a scuffle in which Lennon lost his glasses.
They reportedly ended up with the wife of US entertainer Tommy Smothers, one half of the Smothers Brothers duo who were performing at the club that night,
Lennon also rocked the specs on the cover of his Mind Games single and in other photographs throughout the period.
OPS: John Lennon's Lost Weekend glasses
Picture supplied by Ferrari (FOTO: DUKAS/FERRARI PRESS) -
DUKAS_189941934_NUR
Xochimilco Mayor's Office Prepares For Various Cultural Activities For The Day Of The Dead In Mexico
Circe Camacho, the mayor of Xochimilco in Mexico City, holds a press conference to announce various cultural activities to commemorate the Day of the Dead in Mexico on November 1, 2025. The event takes place on October 13, 2025. Plays, guided street tours, and trajineras are part of the district's cultural repertoire. (Photo by Gerardo Vieyra/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_189941933_NUR
Xochimilco Mayor's Office Prepares For Various Cultural Activities For The Day Of The Dead In Mexico
Circe Camacho, the mayor of Xochimilco in Mexico City, holds a press conference to announce various cultural activities to commemorate the Day of the Dead in Mexico on November 1, 2025. The event takes place on October 13, 2025. Plays, guided street tours, and trajineras are part of the district's cultural repertoire. (Photo by Gerardo Vieyra/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_189922269_NUR
Jews Celebrate The Grand Opening The New Synagogue
Ultra-Orthodox Jewish men dance the horah while carrying the Torah outside a newly built synagogue in Vaughan, Ontario, Canada, on October 12, 2025. The Torah scrolls are brought for the grand opening of the new synagogue and are brought inside the synagogue for the first time following the procession and celebration. (Photo by Creative Touch Imaging Ltd./NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_189922256_NUR
Jews Celebrate The Grand Opening The New Synagogue
An Ultra-Orthodox Jewish man carries the Torah outside a newly built synagogue in Vaughan, Ontario, Canada, on October 12, 2025. The Torah scrolls are brought for the grand opening of the new synagogue and will be brought inside the synagogue for the first time following the procession and celebration. (Photo by Creative Touch Imaging Ltd./NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_189636739_NUR
Fielmann Optician Store
The Fielmann optician store with its illuminated logo is in the town center of Neumarkt in der Oberpfalz, Bavaria, Upper Palatinate, Germany, on October 4, 2025. Fielmann is a leading German optical retail chain that offers eyewear, contact lenses, and eye care services. (Photo by Michael Nguyen/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_188459951_ZUM
Giorgio Armani 1934-2025 Italian Fashion Designer
circa 1970's, Milan, Italy: Portrait of the Italian designer GIORGIO ARMANI. Seventies (Credit Image: © Adriano Alecchi/Mondadori Portfolio via ZUMA Press (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA) *** Local Caption *** Giorgio Armani 1934-2025 Italian Fashion Designer
Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc. -
DUKAS_188457572_ZUM
Mondadori History and Vintage Collection - January 1, 1970
circa 1970's, Milan, Italy: Portrait of the Italian designer GIORGIO ARMANI. Seventies (Credit Image: © Adriano Alecchi/Mondadori Portfolio via ZUMA Press (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA) *** Local Caption *** Giorgio Armani 1934-2025 Italian Fashion Designer
Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc. -
DUKAS_188457570_ZUM
Mondadori History and Vintage Collection - January 1, 1970
circa 1970's, Milan, Italy: Portrait of the Italian designer GIORGIO ARMANI. Seventies (Credit Image: © Adriano Alecchi/Mondadori Portfolio via ZUMA Press (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA) *** Local Caption *** Giorgio Armani 1934-2025 Italian Fashion Designer
Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc. -
DUKAS_188356714_NUR
First State Of The Government Report Of Claudia Sheinbaum, President Of Mexico
Rosa Icela Rodriguez, wearing glasses, the Secretary of the Interior, attends the Chamber of Deputies in Mexico City, Mexico, on September 1, 2025, to deliver the First State of the Government Report of Claudia Sheinbaum, President of Mexico, reporting on the progress and results of her first year in office. (Photo by Gerardo Vieyra/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_188356698_NUR
First State Of The Government Report Of Claudia Sheinbaum, President Of Mexico
Rosa Icela Rodriguez, wearing glasses, the Secretary of the Interior, attends the Chamber of Deputies in Mexico City, Mexico, on September 1, 2025, to deliver the First State of the Government Report of Claudia Sheinbaum, President of Mexico, reporting on the progress and results of her first year in office. (Photo by Gerardo Vieyra/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_188356686_NUR
First State Of The Government Report Of Claudia Sheinbaum, President Of Mexico
Rosa Icela Rodriguez, wearing glasses, the Secretary of the Interior, attends the Chamber of Deputies in Mexico City, Mexico, on September 1, 2025, to deliver the First State of the Government Report of Claudia Sheinbaum, President of Mexico, reporting on the progress and results of her first year in office. (Photo by Gerardo Vieyra/NurPhoto) -
DUKAS_188356682_NUR
First State Of The Government Report Of Claudia Sheinbaum, President Of Mexico
Rosa Icela Rodriguez, wearing glasses, the Secretary of the Interior, attends the Chamber of Deputies in Mexico City, Mexico, on September 1, 2025, to deliver the First State of the Government Report of Claudia Sheinbaum, President of Mexico, reporting on the progress and results of her first year in office. (Photo by Gerardo Vieyra/NurPhoto)
