View allAll Photos Tagged EOSM3
Flickr's video compression sucks!
Recorded with a
Canon EOS M3
Tilt Shift Bokeh with Samyang 24mm F1.4
www.duesseldorf.de/international/tourism/discover/media-h...
"Düsseldorf often Dusseldorf in English sources, is the capital city of the German state of North Rhine-Westphalia and the seventh most populous city in Germany. Düsseldorf is an international business and financial center, renowned for its fashion and trade fairs. The city is headquarters to one Fortune Global 500 and two DAX companies. Messe Düsseldorf organizes nearly one fifth of premier trade shows.
Düsseldorf is known for its academy of fine arts (Joseph Beuys, Emanuel Leutze, August Macke, Gerhard Richter, Sigmar Polke, and Andreas Gursky), its pioneering influence on electronic/experimental music (Kraftwerk) and its Japanese community. On the river Rhine, Düsseldorf holds Rhenish Carnival celebrations every year in February / March. It is one of the central cities of the Rhine-Ruhr metropolitan area. Mercer's 2019 Quality of Living survey ranked Düsseldorf the sixth most livable city in the world."
Source: wikipedia.de
Mercer’s 19th Quality of Living ranking (2019)
01 Vienna
02 Zurich
03 Vancouver
04 Munich
05 Auckland
06 Dusseldorf
07 Frankfurt
08 Copenhagen
09 Geneva
10 Basel
...
41 London (GB)
Christmas decorations
After the reconstruction in 2010 the luxurious atmosphere is gone and the mall now looks like a suburban mall.
"The Church of St. Andreas (German: St. Andreas) is a Roman Catholic monastery church situated in the center of the German city of Duesseldorf. The church, dedicated to St. Andrew, was constructed between 1622 and 1629 in the South German baroque style. It was originally a Jesuit church and also served as the court church for the Counts palatine of Neuburg. After the dissolution of the Jesuit order in August 1773 it served as a parish church until 2005 when it became the monastery church of the Dominican Order. The building itself is now owned by the city of Duesseldorf. The church is furnished with stucco by Johannes Kuhn from Strassburg and life-size sculptures of the apostles and of saints of the Society of Jesus.
The organ dates back to an instrument built in 1782 by Peter Kemper, in a casing by Bernhard Orlinski and Josef Zimmermann. In World War II the organ was damaged. In 1953 it was restored and expanded by 18 stops by the organ builder Fabritius. In 1970/71 and again in 2003, the organ was restored by Rudolf von Beckerath Orgelbau."
Source: wikipedia.org