I have definitely seen pictures of German women pushing barrows of cash to buy food in the 1920s. Seems a bit hard to find these pictures on internet, but I have seen them in books. Keep looking!
Scott Mutter is an artist from Illinois. I used to work for the pre-press operation that created the film for printing his posters. He will take 2 completely separate photographs and mesh them together so that they look like one photo. I believe his most famous posters are the "Escalator" which combines a photo of the ocean with a photo of a man walking toward a huge escalator; and the "Library" which combines a photo of the "stacks" at the University of Illinois and a picture of a Chicago street. His artwork is very popular on campus at the University of Illinois.
His style of painting is hyper-realism and photo-realism
The color photo copier was introduced in 1959 by Xerox. The company was leading the market but was overtaken by Japanese brands like Kyocera, Panasonic, Canon, Minolta, Ricoh and many others. Xerox is now teamed up with Fuji Films which created a new company called Fuji Xerox.
It is a photo of a sculpture, not a painting. And it was created on October 25, 1987 in Yorkshire Sculpture Park
I would call it Hyper-realism (or Photo-realism). Most people describe it as art deco
Photo is das Foto or die Aufnahme in German.
favourite photo = Lieblingsfoto
Foto = photo
Scroll down to related links and look at "German flag".
Heck Yeah...? Its called look it up on GOOGLE... (:
There are photos of the USS Aztec. It was not sunk by a German sub.
Echt gutes foto translates from German to English as Genuinely good photo
they usually photo-shop the pictures to make it look a better colour/shape/size etc :))
There is no difference between american photo shop and english photo shop. Photo shop supports languages: Brazilian Portuguese, Chinese Simplified, Chinese Traditional, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, French, German, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Romanian, Russian, Spanish, Swedish, Turkish and Ukrainian.
You can get a copy of the photo from Zell Mosel official town website. Contact them and they can arrange to get you a photo. You will have to use a German language translator on the web site. See link below.
May I see a pic of you translates as Darf ich ein Bild/Photo von Dir sehen.
This is actually two words, 'muschi' and 'bilder', both of which are German words. The meaning of the first word is an inappropriate slang word referring to part of the female anatomy. The word 'bilder' is German for photo, picture, or image.