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  • 80 Balloons Above Hradec Kralove In Czech Republic
    DUKAS_188481339_ZUM
    80 Balloons Above Hradec Kralove In Czech Republic
    September 5, 2025, Hradec Kralove, Czech Republic: Catch eighty-one colourful hot-air balloons rising above Hradec Kralove at this year's biggest European balloon festival. At the start of the festival on Wednesday, a Czech record was set with 81 balloons taking off from a single location. The event runs until Sunday, 7 September 2025, with pilots from the Czech Republic, Slovakia, the Netherlands, Germany, Austria and Hungary. (Credit Image: © Slavek Ruta/ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc.

     

  • 80 Balloons Above Hradec Kralove In Czech Republic
    DUKAS_188481334_ZUM
    80 Balloons Above Hradec Kralove In Czech Republic
    September 4, 2025, Ceska Skalice, Czech Republic: Hot air balloons take off on a sunny evening from Ceska Skalice (near Hradec Kralove city). Hradec Kralove hosted a spectacular launch of eighty-one hot-air balloons during this year's largest European gathering of its kind. The simultaneous lift-off from one location established a Czech record for the highest number of balloons taking off simultaneously. The festival continues until Sunday, 7 September 2025, with participants from the Czech Republic, Slovakia, the Netherlands, Germany and Hungary. (Credit Image: © Slavek Ruta/ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc.

     

  • 80 Balloons Above Hradec Kralove In Czech Republic
    DUKAS_188441958_ZUM
    80 Balloons Above Hradec Kralove In Czech Republic
    September 4, 2025, Nove Mesto Nad Metuji, Czech Republic: Hot air balloons take off on a sunny morning from the airport in Nove Mesto nad Metuji (near Hradec Kralove city). Hradec Kralove hosted a spectacular launch of eighty-one hot-air balloons during this year‚Äôs largest European gathering of its kind. The simultaneous lift-off from one location established a Czech record for the highest number of balloons taking off at the same time. The festival continues until Sunday, 7 September 2025, with participants from the Czech Republic, Slovakia, the Netherlands, Germany and Hungary. (Credit Image: © Slavek Ruta/ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc.

     

  • Balloon street vendors in India
    DUKAS_188346827_POL
    Balloon street vendors in India
    August 31, 2025 - Agartala, Tripura, India: Migrant street peddlers take shelter in a bus stand to protect their inflatable plastic elephant toys during a rain downpour in Agartala. (Abhisek Saha/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • Balloon street vendors in India
    DUKAS_188346826_POL
    Balloon street vendors in India
    August 31, 2025 - Agartala, Tripura, India: A migrant sales lady selling her inflatable plastic elephant toys during a rain downpour in Agartala. (Abhisek Saha/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • Balloon street vendors in India
    DUKAS_188346825_POL
    Balloon street vendors in India
    August 31, 2025 - Agartala, Tripura, India: A migrant street peddler lady taking shelter to protect her inflatable plastic elephant toys from the rain. (Abhisek Saha/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • Balloon street vendors in India
    DUKAS_188346815_POL
    Balloon street vendors in India
    August 31, 2025 - Agartala, Tripura, India: A migrant lady street peddler selling her inflatable elephant plastic toys during a rain downpour. (Abhisek Saha/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • Balloon street vendors in India
    DUKAS_188346813_POL
    Balloon street vendors in India
    August 31, 2025 - Agartala, Tripura, India: Migrant street peddler tries to take shelter in a bus stand to protect his inflatable plastic elephant toys during a rain downpour in Agartala. (Abhisek Saha/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • Balloon street vendors in India
    DUKAS_188346810_POL
    Balloon street vendors in India
    August 31, 2025 - Agartala, Tripura, India: Migrant street peddler tries to take shelter in a bus stand to protect his inflatable plastic elephant toys during a rain downpour in Agartala. (Abhisek Saha/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • Balloon street vendors in India
    DUKAS_188346808_POL
    Balloon street vendors in India
    August 31, 2025 - Agartala, Tripura, India: Migrant street peddler tries to take shelter in a bus stand to protect his inflatable plastic elephant toys during a rain downpour in Agartala. (Abhisek Saha/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • Balloon street vendors in India
    DUKAS_188346806_POL
    Balloon street vendors in India
    August 31, 2025 - Agartala, Tripura, India: Migrant street peddlers take shelter in a bus stand to protect their inflatable plastic elephant toys during a rain downpour in Agartala. (Abhisek Saha/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • Balloon street vendors in India
    DUKAS_188346805_POL
    Balloon street vendors in India
    August 31, 2025 - Agartala, Tripura, India: A migrant lady street peddler selling her inflatable elephant plastic toys during a rain downpour. (Abhisek Saha/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • Balloon street vendors in India
    DUKAS_188346804_POL
    Balloon street vendors in India
    August 31, 2025 - Agartala, Tripura, India: Students buy an inflatable elephant plastic toy from a migrant lady street peddler during a rain downpour. (Abhisek Saha/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • Balloon street vendors in India
    DUKAS_188346803_POL
    Balloon street vendors in India
    August 31, 2025 - Agartala, Tripura, India: Students buy an inflatable elephant plastic toy from a migrant lady street peddler during a rain downpour. (Abhisek Saha/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • Balloon street vendors in India
    DUKAS_188346802_POL
    Balloon street vendors in India
    August 31, 2025 - Agartala, Tripura, India: A migrant sales lady selling her inflatable plastic elephant toys during a rain downpour in Agartala. (Abhisek Saha/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • Balloon street vendors in India
    DUKAS_188346801_POL
    Balloon street vendors in India
    August 31, 2025 - Agartala, Tripura, India: A migrant sales lady takes shelter under a bus stop to protect her inflatable plastic elephant toys during a rain downpour in Agartala. (Abhisek Saha/Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)

     

  • Wearable robot  for disabled
    DUKAS_187953359_FER
    Wearable robot for disabled
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Wearable robot 1
    Ref 17092
    21/08/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Harvard SEAS Communications
    A wearable robot to help disabled people perform everyday tasks has been developed by engineers.
    The aim is to help those with neurodegenerative disease or who have had a stroke.
    They often suffer from impaired movement of the shoulder, arm or hands, preventing them from daily tasks like brushing their teeth, combing their hair or eating.
    A team at the USA’s Harvard University has developed the soft, wearable robot to provide movement assistance and could even augment therapies to help regain mobility.
    The robot consists of a sensor-loaded vest with a balloon attached underneath the arm that inflates and deflates to apply mechanical assistance to a weak or impaired limb.
    Physical motions are highly individualised, especially for the mobility-impaired, making it difficult to design a device that works for many different people.
    The wearable robot is said to be responsive to an individual user’s exact movements.
    This makes it with more personalised assistance that could give users better, more controlled support for daily tasks.
    The researchers used a machine learning model that personalises assistance levels to an individual user.
    It learns which movements the user is trying to do, via sensors that track both motion and pressure.

    OPS: The wearable robot vest with researchers Prabhat Pathak (left) and James Arnold (right) in the lab.

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

     

  • Wearable robot  for disabled
    DUKAS_187953357_FER
    Wearable robot for disabled
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Wearable robot 1
    Ref 17092
    21/08/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Harvard SEAS Communications
    A wearable robot to help disabled people perform everyday tasks has been developed by engineers.
    The aim is to help those with neurodegenerative disease or who have had a stroke.
    They often suffer from impaired movement of the shoulder, arm or hands, preventing them from daily tasks like brushing their teeth, combing their hair or eating.
    A team at the USA’s Harvard University has developed the soft, wearable robot to provide movement assistance and could even augment therapies to help regain mobility.
    The robot consists of a sensor-loaded vest with a balloon attached underneath the arm that inflates and deflates to apply mechanical assistance to a weak or impaired limb.
    Physical motions are highly individualised, especially for the mobility-impaired, making it difficult to design a device that works for many different people.
    The wearable robot is said to be responsive to an individual user’s exact movements.
    This makes it with more personalised assistance that could give users better, more controlled support for daily tasks.
    The researchers used a machine learning model that personalises assistance levels to an individual user.
    It learns which movements the user is trying to do, via sensors that track both motion and pressure.

    OPS: The wearable robot vest with researchers Prabhat Pathak (left) and James Arnold (right) in the lab.

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

     

  • Wearable robot  for disabled
    DUKAS_187953355_FER
    Wearable robot for disabled
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Wearable robot 1
    Ref 17092
    21/08/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Harvard SEAS Communications
    A wearable robot to help disabled people perform everyday tasks has been developed by engineers.
    The aim is to help those with neurodegenerative disease or who have had a stroke.
    They often suffer from impaired movement of the shoulder, arm or hands, preventing them from daily tasks like brushing their teeth, combing their hair or eating.
    A team at the USA’s Harvard University has developed the soft, wearable robot to provide movement assistance and could even augment therapies to help regain mobility.
    The robot consists of a sensor-loaded vest with a balloon attached underneath the arm that inflates and deflates to apply mechanical assistance to a weak or impaired limb.
    Physical motions are highly individualised, especially for the mobility-impaired, making it difficult to design a device that works for many different people.
    The wearable robot is said to be responsive to an individual user’s exact movements.
    This makes it with more personalised assistance that could give users better, more controlled support for daily tasks.
    The researchers used a machine learning model that personalises assistance levels to an individual user.
    It learns which movements the user is trying to do, via sensors that track both motion and pressure.

    OPS: The wearable robot vest with researchers Prabhat Pathak (left) and James Arnold (right)

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

     

  • Wearable robot  for disabled
    DUKAS_187953354_FER
    Wearable robot for disabled
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Wearable robot 1
    Ref 17092
    21/08/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Harvard SEAS Communications
    A wearable robot to help disabled people perform everyday tasks has been developed by engineers.
    The aim is to help those with neurodegenerative disease or who have had a stroke.
    They often suffer from impaired movement of the shoulder, arm or hands, preventing them from daily tasks like brushing their teeth, combing their hair or eating.
    A team at the USA’s Harvard University has developed the soft, wearable robot to provide movement assistance and could even augment therapies to help regain mobility.
    The robot consists of a sensor-loaded vest with a balloon attached underneath the arm that inflates and deflates to apply mechanical assistance to a weak or impaired limb.
    Physical motions are highly individualised, especially for the mobility-impaired, making it difficult to design a device that works for many different people.
    The wearable robot is said to be responsive to an individual user’s exact movements.
    This makes it with more personalised assistance that could give users better, more controlled support for daily tasks.
    The researchers used a machine learning model that personalises assistance levels to an individual user.
    It learns which movements the user is trying to do, via sensors that track both motion and pressure.

    OPS: The wearable robot vest on a volunteer patient ith ALS. With the robot switched off, (left) they have trouble combing their hair. With it switched on (right)bthey are able to easily perform the task.

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

     

  • Wearable robot  for disabled
    DUKAS_187953353_FER
    Wearable robot for disabled
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Wearable robot 1
    Ref 17092
    21/08/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Harvard SEAS Communications
    A wearable robot to help disabled people perform everyday tasks has been developed by engineers.
    The aim is to help those with neurodegenerative disease or who have had a stroke.
    They often suffer from impaired movement of the shoulder, arm or hands, preventing them from daily tasks like brushing their teeth, combing their hair or eating.
    A team at the USA’s Harvard University has developed the soft, wearable robot to provide movement assistance and could even augment therapies to help regain mobility.
    The robot consists of a sensor-loaded vest with a balloon attached underneath the arm that inflates and deflates to apply mechanical assistance to a weak or impaired limb.
    Physical motions are highly individualised, especially for the mobility-impaired, making it difficult to design a device that works for many different people.
    The wearable robot is said to be responsive to an individual user’s exact movements.
    This makes it with more personalised assistance that could give users better, more controlled support for daily tasks.
    The researchers used a machine learning model that personalises assistance levels to an individual user.
    It learns which movements the user is trying to do, via sensors that track both motion and pressure.

    OPS: The wearable robot vest on a volunteer patient . With the robot switched off, (left) they have troubledrinking from a bottle. With it switched on (right)bthey are able to perform the task.

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

     

  • Wearable robot  for disabled
    DUKAS_187953352_FER
    Wearable robot for disabled
    Ferrari Press Agency
    Wearable robot 1
    Ref 17092
    21/08/2025
    See Ferrari text
    Picture MUST credit: Harvard SEAS Communications
    A wearable robot to help disabled people perform everyday tasks has been developed by engineers.
    The aim is to help those with neurodegenerative disease or who have had a stroke.
    They often suffer from impaired movement of the shoulder, arm or hands, preventing them from daily tasks like brushing their teeth, combing their hair or eating.
    A team at the USA’s Harvard University has developed the soft, wearable robot to provide movement assistance and could even augment therapies to help regain mobility.
    The robot consists of a sensor-loaded vest with a balloon attached underneath the arm that inflates and deflates to apply mechanical assistance to a weak or impaired limb.
    Physical motions are highly individualised, especially for the mobility-impaired, making it difficult to design a device that works for many different people.
    The wearable robot is said to be responsive to an individual user’s exact movements.
    This makes it with more personalised assistance that could give users better, more controlled support for daily tasks.
    The researchers used a machine learning model that personalises assistance levels to an individual user.
    It learns which movements the user is trying to do, via sensors that track both motion and pressure.

    OPS: The wearable robot vest

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

     

  •  Sturgeon Moon From The Beaches Of Barcelona.
    DUKAS_187652028_NUR
    Sturgeon Moon From The Beaches Of Barcelona.
    A woman releases a balloon with the word ''Light'' into the air during the Sturgeon Moon over the Barcelona coastline, in Barcelona, Spain, on August 8, 2025. (Photo by Marc Asensio/NurPhoto)

     

  • Bristol International Balloon Fiesta 2025
    DUKAS_187645566_ZUM
    Bristol International Balloon Fiesta 2025
    August 8, 2025, Bristol, England, United Kingdom: Ninety hot air balloons take off in a mass ascent from Ashton Court estate for the 47th Bristol International Balloon Fiesta celebrating the city of Bristol and its heritage links to hot air ballooning. (Credit Image: © Simon Chapman/London News Pictures via ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc.

     

  • Patricia Carli
    CHLFLO_007802
    Patricia Carli
    Patricia Carli
    Chanteuse.
    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL © LECOEUVRE PHOTOTHEQUE

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • Line Renaud avec Loulou Gaste
    CHLFLO_013852
    Line Renaud avec Loulou Gaste
    Line Renaud avec son mari Loulou Gaste
    Chanteuse, meneuse de revue et actrice française
    1956.
    Collection Christophel © LECOEUVRE PHOTOTHEQUE

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • Brigitte Bardot
    CHLFLO_004707
    Brigitte Bardot
    Brigitte Bardot.
    Clip gainsbourg Comic Strip
    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL © PHOTOTHEQUE LECOEUVRE

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • Brigitte Bardot
    CHLFLO_004706
    Brigitte Bardot
    Brigitte Bardot.
    Clip gainsbourg Comic Strip
    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL © PHOTOTHEQUE LECOEUVRE

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • Le miracule
    CHLAFP_033350
    Le miracule
    Le miracule
    1987
    Real Jean Pierre Mocky
    Jean Poiret.
    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL © France 3 Cinema / Initial Groupe

    COLLECTION CHRISTOPHEL

     

  • 38th Edition Of Frisian Hot Air Balloon Festival.
    DUKAS_187094297_ZUM
    38th Edition Of Frisian Hot Air Balloon Festival.
    July 18, 2025, Joure, Friesland, Netherlands: Hot air balloon teams wait to take to the air. From July 16 to 20, 2025, Joure, Netherlands, hosts the 38th edition of the Friese Ballonfeesten, the largest hot air balloon gathering in the Netherlands. On July 18th, 29 balloons of all sizes and designs took to the air above the Province of Friesland. (Credit Image: © James Petermeier/ZUMA Press Wire (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    Represented by ZUMA Press, Inc.

     

  • San Francisco's Balloon Museum
    DUKAS_183108840_POL
    San Francisco's Balloon Museum
    3/30/2025 - San Francisco, Calif., USA: A couple takes a selfie together while playing in the ball pit at the EmotionAir exhibit in the Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco on Sunday, March 30, 2025. (Dan Hernandez / San Francisco Chronicle / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    © 2025 Dan Hernandez / S.F. Chronicle

     

  • San Francisco's Balloon Museum
    DUKAS_183108839_POL
    San Francisco's Balloon Museum
    3/30/2025 - San Francisco, Calif., USA: People walk through “The Argonaut” display at the EmotionAir exhibit in the Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco on Sunday, March 30, 2025. (Dan Hernandez / San Francisco Chronicle / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    © 2025 Dan Hernandez / S.F. Chronicle

     

  • San Francisco's Balloon Museum
    DUKAS_183108838_POL
    San Francisco's Balloon Museum
    3/30/2025 - San Francisco, Calif., USA: A child walks past inflatable bunnies at the EmotionAir exhibit in the Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco on Sunday, March 30, 2025. (Dan Hernandez / San Francisco Chronicle / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    © 2025 Dan Hernandez / S.F. Chronicle

     

  • San Francisco's Balloon Museum
    DUKAS_183108830_POL
    San Francisco's Balloon Museum
    3/30/2025 - San Francisco, Calif., USA: A child pops his head through the ball pit at the EmotionAir exhibit in the Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco on Sunday, March 30, 2025. (Dan Hernandez / San Francisco Chronicle / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    © 2025 Dan Hernandez / S.F. Chronicle

     

  • San Francisco's Balloon Museum
    DUKAS_183108828_POL
    San Francisco's Balloon Museum
    3/30/2025 - San Francisco, Calif., USA: A child pushes around a tethered ball inside the “Swing” room at the EmotionAir exhibit in the Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco on Sunday, March 30, 2025. (Dan Hernandez / San Francisco Chronicle / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    © 2025 Dan Hernandez / S.F. Chronicle

     

  • San Francisco's Balloon Museum
    DUKAS_183108827_POL
    San Francisco's Balloon Museum
    3/30/2025 - San Francisco, Calif., USA: A view inside the “A Quiet Storm” room where bubbles of fog float around at the EmotionAir exhibit in the Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco on Sunday, March 30, 2025. (Dan Hernandez / San Francisco Chronicle / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    © 2025 Dan Hernandez / S.F. Chronicle

     

  • San Francisco's Balloon Museum
    DUKAS_183108826_POL
    San Francisco's Balloon Museum
    3/30/2025 - San Francisco, Calif., USA: People play with the interactive gel mat in the “Kaleidoscope” room at the EmotionAir exhibit in the Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco on Sunday, March 30, 2025. (Dan Hernandez / San Francisco Chronicle / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    © 2025 Dan Hernandez / S.F. Chronicle

     

  • San Francisco's Balloon Museum
    DUKAS_183108825_POL
    San Francisco's Balloon Museum
    3/30/2025 - San Francisco, Calif., USA: A view the “Airship Orchestra” room at the EmotionAir exhibit in the Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco on Sunday, March 30, 2025. (Dan Hernandez / San Francisco Chronicle / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    © 2025 Dan Hernandez / S.F. Chronicle

     

  • San Francisco's Balloon Museum
    DUKAS_183108824_POL
    San Francisco's Balloon Museum
    3/30/2025 - San Francisco, Calif., USA: A parent holds up their child to pop a bubble in front of the “Black Hole Horizon” display at the EmotionAir exhibit in the Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco on Sunday, March 30, 2025. (Dan Hernandez / San Francisco Chronicle / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    © 2025 Dan Hernandez / S.F. Chronicle

     

  • San Francisco's Balloon Museum
    DUKAS_183108823_POL
    San Francisco's Balloon Museum
    3/30/2025 - San Francisco, Calif., USA: A view of the ball pit room at the EmotionAir exhibit in the Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco on Sunday, March 30, 2025. (Dan Hernandez / San Francisco Chronicle / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    © 2025 Dan Hernandez / S.F. Chronicle

     

  • San Francisco's Balloon Museum
    DUKAS_183108821_POL
    San Francisco's Balloon Museum
    3/30/2025 - San Francisco, Calif., USA: A child reaches out to pop a bubble in front of the “Black Hole Horizon” display at the EmotionAir exhibit in the Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco on Sunday, March 30, 2025. (Dan Hernandez / San Francisco Chronicle / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    © 2025 Dan Hernandez / S.F. Chronicle

     

  • San Francisco's Balloon Museum
    DUKAS_183108819_POL
    San Francisco's Balloon Museum
    3/30/2025 - San Francisco, Calif., USA: A view inside the “Invisible Ballet” room where people play inside a tornado of balloons at the EmotionAir exhibit in the Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco on Sunday, March 30, 2025. (Dan Hernandez / San Francisco Chronicle / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    © 2025 Dan Hernandez / S.F. Chronicle

     

  • San Francisco's Balloon Museum
    DUKAS_183108818_POL
    San Francisco's Balloon Museum
    3/30/2025 - San Francisco, Calif., USA: Children play in the “Playground Love” room at the EmotionAir exhibit in the Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco on Sunday, March 30, 2025. (Dan Hernandez / San Francisco Chronicle / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    © 2025 Dan Hernandez / S.F. Chronicle

     

  • San Francisco's Balloon Museum
    DUKAS_183108811_POL
    San Francisco's Balloon Museum
    3/30/2025 - San Francisco, Calif., USA: A child pushes around a tethered ball inside the “Swing” room at the EmotionAir exhibit in the Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco on Sunday, March 30, 2025. (Dan Hernandez / San Francisco Chronicle / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    © 2025 Dan Hernandez / S.F. Chronicle

     

  • San Francisco's Balloon Museum
    DUKAS_183108808_POL
    San Francisco's Balloon Museum
    3/30/2025 - San Francisco, Calif., USA: A view inside the “A Quiet Storm” room where bubbles of fog float around at the EmotionAir exhibit in the Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco on Sunday, March 30, 2025. (Dan Hernandez / San Francisco Chronicle / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    © 2025 Dan Hernandez / S.F. Chronicle

     

  • Kyiv sparkles at night during holiday season
    DUKAS_179346117_POL
    Kyiv sparkles at night during holiday season
    KYIV, UKRAINE - DECEMBER 30, 2024 - LED balloons are at the main Christmas tree of Ukraine in Sofiiska Square, Kyiv, capital of Ukraine. (Ukrinform/POLARIS) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS)
    Ukrinform

     

  • Samsonite propulse sa nouvelle valise depuis l'Espace
    DUKAS_176956991_BES
    Samsonite propulse sa nouvelle valise depuis l'Espace
    Picture MUST credit: Samsonite Travel gear maker Samsonite has taken one of its products to new heights — by dropping it back down to Earth from space. The US premium luggage firm took its new Proxis suitcase 40 km to the edge of space in collaboration with UK firm space launch company Sent Into Space. The Proxis features Samsonite's Roxkin outer shell, renowned for its lightness and strength. A cabin case weighing just over 2kg was selected for the mission. The launch , using a giant stratospheric hydrogen-filled balloon, was held just outside Las Vegas, Nevada at a secure launch site in the Mojave Desert. The one-of-a-kind spacecraft, designed by Sent Into Space engineers, was equipped with a flight computer with satellite and radio communications systems that allowed the team on the ground to track the craft's position in real-time and recover it swiftly on its return to Earth. A self-deploying parachute system brought the craft down at a safe and controlled speed, while a fleet of 360° and 4K camera systems documented the journey. The Proxis suitcase landed completely intact and, according to Samsonite, “without a single scratch.” Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • Samsonite propulse sa nouvelle valise depuis l'Espace
    DUKAS_176956990_BES
    Samsonite propulse sa nouvelle valise depuis l'Espace
    Picture MUST credit: Samsonite Travel gear maker Samsonite has taken one of its products to new heights — by dropping it back down to Earth from space. The US premium luggage firm took its new Proxis suitcase 40 km to the edge of space in collaboration with UK firm space launch company Sent Into Space. The Proxis features Samsonite's Roxkin outer shell, renowned for its lightness and strength. A cabin case weighing just over 2kg was selected for the mission. The launch , using a giant stratospheric hydrogen-filled balloon, was held just outside Las Vegas, Nevada at a secure launch site in the Mojave Desert. The one-of-a-kind spacecraft, designed by Sent Into Space engineers, was equipped with a flight computer with satellite and radio communications systems that allowed the team on the ground to track the craft's position in real-time and recover it swiftly on its return to Earth. A self-deploying parachute system brought the craft down at a safe and controlled speed, while a fleet of 360° and 4K camera systems documented the journey. The Proxis suitcase landed completely intact and, according to Samsonite, “without a single scratch.” Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • Samsonite propulse sa nouvelle valise depuis l'Espace
    DUKAS_176956989_BES
    Samsonite propulse sa nouvelle valise depuis l'Espace
    Picture MUST credit: Samsonite Travel gear maker Samsonite has taken one of its products to new heights — by dropping it back down to Earth from space. The US premium luggage firm took its new Proxis suitcase 40 km to the edge of space in collaboration with UK firm space launch company Sent Into Space. The Proxis features Samsonite's Roxkin outer shell, renowned for its lightness and strength. A cabin case weighing just over 2kg was selected for the mission. The launch , using a giant stratospheric hydrogen-filled balloon, was held just outside Las Vegas, Nevada at a secure launch site in the Mojave Desert. The one-of-a-kind spacecraft, designed by Sent Into Space engineers, was equipped with a flight computer with satellite and radio communications systems that allowed the team on the ground to track the craft's position in real-time and recover it swiftly on its return to Earth. A self-deploying parachute system brought the craft down at a safe and controlled speed, while a fleet of 360° and 4K camera systems documented the journey. The Proxis suitcase landed completely intact and, according to Samsonite, “without a single scratch.” Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

  • Samsonite propulse sa nouvelle valise depuis l'Espace
    DUKAS_176956988_BES
    Samsonite propulse sa nouvelle valise depuis l'Espace
    Picture MUST credit: Samsonite Travel gear maker Samsonite has taken one of its products to new heights — by dropping it back down to Earth from space. The US premium luggage firm took its new Proxis suitcase 40 km to the edge of space in collaboration with UK firm space launch company Sent Into Space. The Proxis features Samsonite's Roxkin outer shell, renowned for its lightness and strength. A cabin case weighing just over 2kg was selected for the mission. The launch , using a giant stratospheric hydrogen-filled balloon, was held just outside Las Vegas, Nevada at a secure launch site in the Mojave Desert. The one-of-a-kind spacecraft, designed by Sent Into Space engineers, was equipped with a flight computer with satellite and radio communications systems that allowed the team on the ground to track the craft's position in real-time and recover it swiftly on its return to Earth. A self-deploying parachute system brought the craft down at a safe and controlled speed, while a fleet of 360° and 4K camera systems documented the journey. The Proxis suitcase landed completely intact and, according to Samsonite, “without a single scratch.” Picture supplied by JLPPA
    JLPPA / Bestimage

     

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