Warsaw Natale 2017
View photo
Fori Romani "Dimmi cos'è cos'è quella stella grande grande in fondo al cielo che brilla dentro di te e grida forte forte dal tuo cuore. Grazie Roma che ci fai piangere abbracciati ancora Grazie Roma, grazie Roma che ci fai vivere e sentire ancora una persona nuova" Antonello Venditti, Grazie Roma
Roma by Night 2017 "Quanto sei bella Roma quand'e' er tramonto quando l'arancio rosseggia ancora sui sette colli e le finestre so' tanti occhi, che te sembrano dì: quanto sei bella" Antonello Venditti, Roma Capoccia
Mantova Città della cultura 2016
Piazza Palazzo di Città 2011 Torino Si respira l'aria bohemien tipica di Torino, i portici, i lampioni, i palazzi settecenteschi tutti con le soffitte, gli abbaini. You can feel the typical bohemian atmophere of Turin, the porches, the street lamps, the eighteenth-century palaces.
Milano Christmas Lights The Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II is Italy's oldest active shopping mall and a major landmark of the city of Milan. Housed within a four-story double arcade in the center of town, the Galleria is named after Vittorio Emanuele II, the first king of Italy. It was designed in 1861 and built by architect Giuseppe Mengoni between 1865 and 1877. The structure consists of two glass-vaulted arcades intersecting in an octagon covering the street connecting Piazza del Duomo to Piazza della Scala. The central octagonal space is topped with a glass dome. The Milanese Galleria was larger in scale than its predecessors and was an important step in the evolution of the modern glazed and enclosed shopping mall, of which it was the direct progenitor. It has inspired the use of the term galleria for many other shopping arcades and malls.
Buon Natale
Walk along the port in a quiet summer evening Tarbert, Kintyre Scotland
With long, narrow glass tubes, bent into all sorts of shapes, the eye-catching colorful neon signs lit up the nights of a post-war America, especially in the early 1950s to late 1960s. Major cities and motels throughout the country had elaborate displays of neon signs which employed themes from popular culture, ranging from Western imagery of cowboys and Indians to contemporary images of spaceships. Substituted by LEDs, today you can find them sadly despayed in museums or silently abandoned in old motels, poetry of a time that will never come back.