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  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_017.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_007.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_002.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_008.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_006.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_009.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_011.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_016.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_015.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_005.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_003.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_004.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_001.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_010.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_012.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_014.jpg
  • He's nailed it. String artist Ben Koracevic creates these incredible works of art - using just cord and nails. The London-based creative winds thousands of metres of string around tens of thousands of nails to create what he calls 'stringometry'. Among his works are a huge portrait of Hollywood star Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson and Keanu Reeves as his John Wick action hero character. He has also created a likeness of Batman baddie The Joker - as played by Joaquin Phoenix in 2019 movie, Joker, as well as animals including a lion and monkeys and guitarist Slash from Guns N' Roses. He only started doing 'string art' nine months ago after watching a video of someone else showing off their skills. "I was completed fascinated with the rare art form," he said. "Developing my skill and ability to replicate what I witnessed became an obsession and I soon found every spare hour being invested into practising." The self-taught artist - who holds a science degree - has since quit his job and cashed in his life savings to follow his dream. He added: "I am quite particular on the pieces I choose. "It is just an instinct where I know the image will look good in string. "It is a very time consuming process which is a quality I enjoy. I love the mental endurance and patience needed to complete a piece to high quality. "Art is a universal language where the work does all the talking!" Ben uses a grid system overlapping a photo or sketch. He then upscales that on to a wooden canvas, before "meticulously referencing" nails to mark a foundation and an outline for the string. He winds the string between the nails to create a likeness, using more string to create darker shadows and more detail. He has used between 6,000 and 30,000 nails on individual pieces - and some contain more than 3,000 metres of string. And he can spend as much as 500 hours alone creating one piece. His works are available to buy at stringometry.com and he is available for private commissions. Please credit Courtesy of
    MEGA647118_013.jpg
  • May 9, 2017 - Toronto, Ontario, Canada - TORONTO, ON - MAY, 9    Veigas looks at her degree as her daughter Jadyn 15 and husband Joseph D'Souza..Despite being diagnosed with terminal cancer, Precilla Veigas fulfilled a lifelong dream of earning her PhD in medical science. Because her prognosis is uncertain, she received the degree at a special convocation ceremony arranged just for her, and her family, at U of T on Tuesday..May 9, 2017 Richard Lautens/Toronto Star Richard Lautens/Toronto Star (Credit Image: © Richard Lautens/The Toronto Star via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170509_zan_t14_006.jpg
  • Newly released images of the Sun have revealed that its outer layer is filled with previously unseen, incredibly fine magnetic threads filled with extremely hot, million-degree plasma. The high-resolution observations have been analysed by researchers at UCLan alongside collaborators from NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Centre (MSFC) and will provide astronomers with a better understanding of how the Sun’s magnetised atmosphere exists, and what it is comprised of.<br />
<br />
Until now, certain parts of the Sun’s atmosphere had appeared dark or mostly empty, but new images have revealed strands that are around 500km in width - roughly the distance between London and Belfast - with hot electrified gases flowing inside them.<br />
<br />
The ultra-sharp images were taken by NASA’s High-Resolution Coronal Imager (or Hi-C for short), a unique astronomical telescope carried into space on a sub-orbital rocket flight. The telescope can pick out structures in the Sun’s atmosphere as small as 70km in size, or around 0.01% the size of the Sun, making these the highest resolution images ever taken of the Sun’s atmosphere. MORE COPY AVAILABLE: info@cover-images.com<br />
<br />
When: 05 Mar 2020<br />
Credit: UCLan/Cover Images<br />
<br />
**Editorial use only**
    40449375.jpg
  • Newly released images of the Sun have revealed that its outer layer is filled with previously unseen, incredibly fine magnetic threads filled with extremely hot, million-degree plasma. The high-resolution observations have been analysed by researchers at UCLan alongside collaborators from NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Centre (MSFC) and will provide astronomers with a better understanding of how the Sun’s magnetised atmosphere exists, and what it is comprised of.<br />
<br />
Until now, certain parts of the Sun’s atmosphere had appeared dark or mostly empty, but new images have revealed strands that are around 500km in width - roughly the distance between London and Belfast - with hot electrified gases flowing inside them.<br />
<br />
The ultra-sharp images were taken by NASA’s High-Resolution Coronal Imager (or Hi-C for short), a unique astronomical telescope carried into space on a sub-orbital rocket flight. The telescope can pick out structures in the Sun’s atmosphere as small as 70km in size, or around 0.01% the size of the Sun, making these the highest resolution images ever taken of the Sun’s atmosphere. MORE COPY AVAILABLE: info@cover-images.com<br />
<br />
When: 16 Apr 2020<br />
Credit: UCLan/Cover Images<br />
<br />
**Editorial use only**
    40449377.jpg
  • Newly released images of the Sun have revealed that its outer layer is filled with previously unseen, incredibly fine magnetic threads filled with extremely hot, million-degree plasma. The high-resolution observations have been analysed by researchers at UCLan alongside collaborators from NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Centre (MSFC) and will provide astronomers with a better understanding of how the Sun’s magnetised atmosphere exists, and what it is comprised of.<br />
<br />
Until now, certain parts of the Sun’s atmosphere had appeared dark or mostly empty, but new images have revealed strands that are around 500km in width - roughly the distance between London and Belfast - with hot electrified gases flowing inside them.<br />
<br />
The ultra-sharp images were taken by NASA’s High-Resolution Coronal Imager (or Hi-C for short), a unique astronomical telescope carried into space on a sub-orbital rocket flight. The telescope can pick out structures in the Sun’s atmosphere as small as 70km in size, or around 0.01% the size of the Sun, making these the highest resolution images ever taken of the Sun’s atmosphere. MORE COPY AVAILABLE: info@cover-images.com<br />
<br />
When: 09 Apr 2020<br />
Credit: UCLan/Cover Images<br />
<br />
**Editorial use only**
    40449379.jpg
  • Newly released images of the Sun have revealed that its outer layer is filled with previously unseen, incredibly fine magnetic threads filled with extremely hot, million-degree plasma. The high-resolution observations have been analysed by researchers at UCLan alongside collaborators from NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Centre (MSFC) and will provide astronomers with a better understanding of how the Sun’s magnetised atmosphere exists, and what it is comprised of.<br />
<br />
Until now, certain parts of the Sun’s atmosphere had appeared dark or mostly empty, but new images have revealed strands that are around 500km in width - roughly the distance between London and Belfast - with hot electrified gases flowing inside them.<br />
<br />
The ultra-sharp images were taken by NASA’s High-Resolution Coronal Imager (or Hi-C for short), a unique astronomical telescope carried into space on a sub-orbital rocket flight. The telescope can pick out structures in the Sun’s atmosphere as small as 70km in size, or around 0.01% the size of the Sun, making these the highest resolution images ever taken of the Sun’s atmosphere. MORE COPY AVAILABLE: info@cover-images.com<br />
<br />
When: 16 Apr 2020<br />
Credit: UCLan/Cover Images<br />
<br />
**Editorial use only**
    40449380.jpg
  • Newly released images of the Sun have revealed that its outer layer is filled with previously unseen, incredibly fine magnetic threads filled with extremely hot, million-degree plasma. The high-resolution observations have been analysed by researchers at UCLan alongside collaborators from NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Centre (MSFC) and will provide astronomers with a better understanding of how the Sun’s magnetised atmosphere exists, and what it is comprised of.<br />
<br />
Until now, certain parts of the Sun’s atmosphere had appeared dark or mostly empty, but new images have revealed strands that are around 500km in width - roughly the distance between London and Belfast - with hot electrified gases flowing inside them.<br />
<br />
The ultra-sharp images were taken by NASA’s High-Resolution Coronal Imager (or Hi-C for short), a unique astronomical telescope carried into space on a sub-orbital rocket flight. The telescope can pick out structures in the Sun’s atmosphere as small as 70km in size, or around 0.01% the size of the Sun, making these the highest resolution images ever taken of the Sun’s atmosphere. MORE COPY AVAILABLE: info@cover-images.com<br />
<br />
When: 05 Mar 2020<br />
Credit: UCLan/Cover Images<br />
<br />
**Editorial use only**
    40449372.jpg
  • Newly released images of the Sun have revealed that its outer layer is filled with previously unseen, incredibly fine magnetic threads filled with extremely hot, million-degree plasma. The high-resolution observations have been analysed by researchers at UCLan alongside collaborators from NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Centre (MSFC) and will provide astronomers with a better understanding of how the Sun’s magnetised atmosphere exists, and what it is comprised of.<br />
<br />
Until now, certain parts of the Sun’s atmosphere had appeared dark or mostly empty, but new images have revealed strands that are around 500km in width - roughly the distance between London and Belfast - with hot electrified gases flowing inside them.<br />
<br />
The ultra-sharp images were taken by NASA’s High-Resolution Coronal Imager (or Hi-C for short), a unique astronomical telescope carried into space on a sub-orbital rocket flight. The telescope can pick out structures in the Sun’s atmosphere as small as 70km in size, or around 0.01% the size of the Sun, making these the highest resolution images ever taken of the Sun’s atmosphere. MORE COPY AVAILABLE: info@cover-images.com<br />
<br />
When: 05 Mar 2020<br />
Credit: UCLan/Cover Images<br />
<br />
**Editorial use only**
    40449373.jpg
  • Newly released images of the Sun have revealed that its outer layer is filled with previously unseen, incredibly fine magnetic threads filled with extremely hot, million-degree plasma. The high-resolution observations have been analysed by researchers at UCLan alongside collaborators from NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Centre (MSFC) and will provide astronomers with a better understanding of how the Sun’s magnetised atmosphere exists, and what it is comprised of.<br />
<br />
Until now, certain parts of the Sun’s atmosphere had appeared dark or mostly empty, but new images have revealed strands that are around 500km in width - roughly the distance between London and Belfast - with hot electrified gases flowing inside them.<br />
<br />
The ultra-sharp images were taken by NASA’s High-Resolution Coronal Imager (or Hi-C for short), a unique astronomical telescope carried into space on a sub-orbital rocket flight. The telescope can pick out structures in the Sun’s atmosphere as small as 70km in size, or around 0.01% the size of the Sun, making these the highest resolution images ever taken of the Sun’s atmosphere. MORE COPY AVAILABLE: info@cover-images.com<br />
<br />
When: 27 Feb 2020<br />
Credit: UCLan/Cover Images<br />
<br />
**Editorial use only**
    40449374.jpg
  • Newly released images of the Sun have revealed that its outer layer is filled with previously unseen, incredibly fine magnetic threads filled with extremely hot, million-degree plasma. The high-resolution observations have been analysed by researchers at UCLan alongside collaborators from NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Centre (MSFC) and will provide astronomers with a better understanding of how the Sun’s magnetised atmosphere exists, and what it is comprised of.<br />
<br />
Until now, certain parts of the Sun’s atmosphere had appeared dark or mostly empty, but new images have revealed strands that are around 500km in width - roughly the distance between London and Belfast - with hot electrified gases flowing inside them.<br />
<br />
The ultra-sharp images were taken by NASA’s High-Resolution Coronal Imager (or Hi-C for short), a unique astronomical telescope carried into space on a sub-orbital rocket flight. The telescope can pick out structures in the Sun’s atmosphere as small as 70km in size, or around 0.01% the size of the Sun, making these the highest resolution images ever taken of the Sun’s atmosphere. MORE COPY AVAILABLE: info@cover-images.com<br />
<br />
When: 11 Feb 2020<br />
Credit: UCLan/Cover Images<br />
<br />
**Editorial use only**
    40449376.jpg
  • Newly released images of the Sun have revealed that its outer layer is filled with previously unseen, incredibly fine magnetic threads filled with extremely hot, million-degree plasma. The high-resolution observations have been analysed by researchers at UCLan alongside collaborators from NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Centre (MSFC) and will provide astronomers with a better understanding of how the Sun’s magnetised atmosphere exists, and what it is comprised of.<br />
<br />
Until now, certain parts of the Sun’s atmosphere had appeared dark or mostly empty, but new images have revealed strands that are around 500km in width - roughly the distance between London and Belfast - with hot electrified gases flowing inside them.<br />
<br />
The ultra-sharp images were taken by NASA’s High-Resolution Coronal Imager (or Hi-C for short), a unique astronomical telescope carried into space on a sub-orbital rocket flight. The telescope can pick out structures in the Sun’s atmosphere as small as 70km in size, or around 0.01% the size of the Sun, making these the highest resolution images ever taken of the Sun’s atmosphere. MORE COPY AVAILABLE: info@cover-images.com<br />
<br />
When: 16 Apr 2020<br />
Credit: UCLan/Cover Images<br />
<br />
**Editorial use only**
    40449378.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ‘Hot Bench’ Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York State Patricia Mafalda DiMango (born 1953) is a retired justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County, New York. DiMango, a Brooklyn native, earned a Bachelor of Science degree from Brooklyn College at the City University of New York, as well as a Master of Arts degree from Columbia University Teachers College. She received a Juris Doctor degree from the St. John's University School of Law. DiMango was a former college professor and NYC Public School Teacher. DiMango was appointed as a Judge of the Criminal Court of the City of New York by Mayor Rudolph Giuliani in 1995. She was appointed Acting Justice of the State Supreme Court, 2nd Judicial District in 1998. She was elected as a justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County in 2002. DiMango is one of the three judges on the panel court show Hot Bench, created by Judge Judy Sheindlin, which debuted in September 2014. She is mentioned in a New Yorker article regarding Kalief Browder, a 16-year-old who spent over three years in Rikers Island awaiting trial. According to the article, DiMango was the presiding judge who released Browder on his 31st court appearance. She has also been involved with numerous other high-profile cases, including murders and other crimes committed against children, and hate crimes. 16 Aug 2017 Pictured: Hot Bench Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York. Photo credit: Dan Callister / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA94278_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ‘Hot Bench’ Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York State Patricia Mafalda DiMango (born 1953) is a retired justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County, New York. DiMango, a Brooklyn native, earned a Bachelor of Science degree from Brooklyn College at the City University of New York, as well as a Master of Arts degree from Columbia University Teachers College. She received a Juris Doctor degree from the St. John's University School of Law. DiMango was a former college professor and NYC Public School Teacher. DiMango was appointed as a Judge of the Criminal Court of the City of New York by Mayor Rudolph Giuliani in 1995. She was appointed Acting Justice of the State Supreme Court, 2nd Judicial District in 1998. She was elected as a justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County in 2002. DiMango is one of the three judges on the panel court show Hot Bench, created by Judge Judy Sheindlin, which debuted in September 2014. She is mentioned in a New Yorker article regarding Kalief Browder, a 16-year-old who spent over three years in Rikers Island awaiting trial. According to the article, DiMango was the presiding judge who released Browder on his 31st court appearance. She has also been involved with numerous other high-profile cases, including murders and other crimes committed against children, and hate crimes. 16 Aug 2017 Pictured: Hot Bench Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York. Photo credit: Dan Callister / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA94278_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ‘Hot Bench’ Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York State Patricia Mafalda DiMango (born 1953) is a retired justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County, New York. DiMango, a Brooklyn native, earned a Bachelor of Science degree from Brooklyn College at the City University of New York, as well as a Master of Arts degree from Columbia University Teachers College. She received a Juris Doctor degree from the St. John's University School of Law. DiMango was a former college professor and NYC Public School Teacher. DiMango was appointed as a Judge of the Criminal Court of the City of New York by Mayor Rudolph Giuliani in 1995. She was appointed Acting Justice of the State Supreme Court, 2nd Judicial District in 1998. She was elected as a justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County in 2002. DiMango is one of the three judges on the panel court show Hot Bench, created by Judge Judy Sheindlin, which debuted in September 2014. She is mentioned in a New Yorker article regarding Kalief Browder, a 16-year-old who spent over three years in Rikers Island awaiting trial. According to the article, DiMango was the presiding judge who released Browder on his 31st court appearance. She has also been involved with numerous other high-profile cases, including murders and other crimes committed against children, and hate crimes. 16 Aug 2017 Pictured: Hot Bench Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York. Photo credit: Dan Callister / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA94278_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ‘Hot Bench’ Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York State Patricia Mafalda DiMango (born 1953) is a retired justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County, New York. DiMango, a Brooklyn native, earned a Bachelor of Science degree from Brooklyn College at the City University of New York, as well as a Master of Arts degree from Columbia University Teachers College. She received a Juris Doctor degree from the St. John's University School of Law. DiMango was a former college professor and NYC Public School Teacher. DiMango was appointed as a Judge of the Criminal Court of the City of New York by Mayor Rudolph Giuliani in 1995. She was appointed Acting Justice of the State Supreme Court, 2nd Judicial District in 1998. She was elected as a justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County in 2002. DiMango is one of the three judges on the panel court show Hot Bench, created by Judge Judy Sheindlin, which debuted in September 2014. She is mentioned in a New Yorker article regarding Kalief Browder, a 16-year-old who spent over three years in Rikers Island awaiting trial. According to the article, DiMango was the presiding judge who released Browder on his 31st court appearance. She has also been involved with numerous other high-profile cases, including murders and other crimes committed against children, and hate crimes. 16 Aug 2017 Pictured: Hot Bench Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York. Photo credit: Dan Callister / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA94278_011.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ‘Hot Bench’ Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York State Patricia Mafalda DiMango (born 1953) is a retired justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County, New York. DiMango, a Brooklyn native, earned a Bachelor of Science degree from Brooklyn College at the City University of New York, as well as a Master of Arts degree from Columbia University Teachers College. She received a Juris Doctor degree from the St. John's University School of Law. DiMango was a former college professor and NYC Public School Teacher. DiMango was appointed as a Judge of the Criminal Court of the City of New York by Mayor Rudolph Giuliani in 1995. She was appointed Acting Justice of the State Supreme Court, 2nd Judicial District in 1998. She was elected as a justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County in 2002. DiMango is one of the three judges on the panel court show Hot Bench, created by Judge Judy Sheindlin, which debuted in September 2014. She is mentioned in a New Yorker article regarding Kalief Browder, a 16-year-old who spent over three years in Rikers Island awaiting trial. According to the article, DiMango was the presiding judge who released Browder on his 31st court appearance. She has also been involved with numerous other high-profile cases, including murders and other crimes committed against children, and hate crimes. 16 Aug 2017 Pictured: Hot Bench Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York. Photo credit: Dan Callister / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA94278_019.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ‘Hot Bench’ Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York State Patricia Mafalda DiMango (born 1953) is a retired justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County, New York. DiMango, a Brooklyn native, earned a Bachelor of Science degree from Brooklyn College at the City University of New York, as well as a Master of Arts degree from Columbia University Teachers College. She received a Juris Doctor degree from the St. John's University School of Law. DiMango was a former college professor and NYC Public School Teacher. DiMango was appointed as a Judge of the Criminal Court of the City of New York by Mayor Rudolph Giuliani in 1995. She was appointed Acting Justice of the State Supreme Court, 2nd Judicial District in 1998. She was elected as a justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County in 2002. DiMango is one of the three judges on the panel court show Hot Bench, created by Judge Judy Sheindlin, which debuted in September 2014. She is mentioned in a New Yorker article regarding Kalief Browder, a 16-year-old who spent over three years in Rikers Island awaiting trial. According to the article, DiMango was the presiding judge who released Browder on his 31st court appearance. She has also been involved with numerous other high-profile cases, including murders and other crimes committed against children, and hate crimes. 16 Aug 2017 Pictured: Hot Bench Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York. Photo credit: Dan Callister / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA94278_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ‘Hot Bench’ Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York State Patricia Mafalda DiMango (born 1953) is a retired justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County, New York. DiMango, a Brooklyn native, earned a Bachelor of Science degree from Brooklyn College at the City University of New York, as well as a Master of Arts degree from Columbia University Teachers College. She received a Juris Doctor degree from the St. John's University School of Law. DiMango was a former college professor and NYC Public School Teacher. DiMango was appointed as a Judge of the Criminal Court of the City of New York by Mayor Rudolph Giuliani in 1995. She was appointed Acting Justice of the State Supreme Court, 2nd Judicial District in 1998. She was elected as a justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County in 2002. DiMango is one of the three judges on the panel court show Hot Bench, created by Judge Judy Sheindlin, which debuted in September 2014. She is mentioned in a New Yorker article regarding Kalief Browder, a 16-year-old who spent over three years in Rikers Island awaiting trial. According to the article, DiMango was the presiding judge who released Browder on his 31st court appearance. She has also been involved with numerous other high-profile cases, including murders and other crimes committed against children, and hate crimes. 16 Aug 2017 Pictured: Hot Bench Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York. Photo credit: Dan Callister / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA94278_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ‘Hot Bench’ Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York State Patricia Mafalda DiMango (born 1953) is a retired justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County, New York. DiMango, a Brooklyn native, earned a Bachelor of Science degree from Brooklyn College at the City University of New York, as well as a Master of Arts degree from Columbia University Teachers College. She received a Juris Doctor degree from the St. John's University School of Law. DiMango was a former college professor and NYC Public School Teacher. DiMango was appointed as a Judge of the Criminal Court of the City of New York by Mayor Rudolph Giuliani in 1995. She was appointed Acting Justice of the State Supreme Court, 2nd Judicial District in 1998. She was elected as a justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County in 2002. DiMango is one of the three judges on the panel court show Hot Bench, created by Judge Judy Sheindlin, which debuted in September 2014. She is mentioned in a New Yorker article regarding Kalief Browder, a 16-year-old who spent over three years in Rikers Island awaiting trial. According to the article, DiMango was the presiding judge who released Browder on his 31st court appearance. She has also been involved with numerous other high-profile cases, including murders and other crimes committed against children, and hate crimes. 16 Aug 2017 Pictured: Hot Bench Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York. Photo credit: Dan Callister / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA94278_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ‘Hot Bench’ Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York State Patricia Mafalda DiMango (born 1953) is a retired justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County, New York. DiMango, a Brooklyn native, earned a Bachelor of Science degree from Brooklyn College at the City University of New York, as well as a Master of Arts degree from Columbia University Teachers College. She received a Juris Doctor degree from the St. John's University School of Law. DiMango was a former college professor and NYC Public School Teacher. DiMango was appointed as a Judge of the Criminal Court of the City of New York by Mayor Rudolph Giuliani in 1995. She was appointed Acting Justice of the State Supreme Court, 2nd Judicial District in 1998. She was elected as a justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County in 2002. DiMango is one of the three judges on the panel court show Hot Bench, created by Judge Judy Sheindlin, which debuted in September 2014. She is mentioned in a New Yorker article regarding Kalief Browder, a 16-year-old who spent over three years in Rikers Island awaiting trial. According to the article, DiMango was the presiding judge who released Browder on his 31st court appearance. She has also been involved with numerous other high-profile cases, including murders and other crimes committed against children, and hate crimes. 16 Aug 2017 Pictured: Hot Bench Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York. Photo credit: Dan Callister / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA94278_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ‘Hot Bench’ Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York State Patricia Mafalda DiMango (born 1953) is a retired justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County, New York. DiMango, a Brooklyn native, earned a Bachelor of Science degree from Brooklyn College at the City University of New York, as well as a Master of Arts degree from Columbia University Teachers College. She received a Juris Doctor degree from the St. John's University School of Law. DiMango was a former college professor and NYC Public School Teacher. DiMango was appointed as a Judge of the Criminal Court of the City of New York by Mayor Rudolph Giuliani in 1995. She was appointed Acting Justice of the State Supreme Court, 2nd Judicial District in 1998. She was elected as a justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County in 2002. DiMango is one of the three judges on the panel court show Hot Bench, created by Judge Judy Sheindlin, which debuted in September 2014. She is mentioned in a New Yorker article regarding Kalief Browder, a 16-year-old who spent over three years in Rikers Island awaiting trial. According to the article, DiMango was the presiding judge who released Browder on his 31st court appearance. She has also been involved with numerous other high-profile cases, including murders and other crimes committed against children, and hate crimes. 16 Aug 2017 Pictured: Hot Bench Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York. Photo credit: Dan Callister / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA94278_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ‘Hot Bench’ Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York State Patricia Mafalda DiMango (born 1953) is a retired justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County, New York. DiMango, a Brooklyn native, earned a Bachelor of Science degree from Brooklyn College at the City University of New York, as well as a Master of Arts degree from Columbia University Teachers College. She received a Juris Doctor degree from the St. John's University School of Law. DiMango was a former college professor and NYC Public School Teacher. DiMango was appointed as a Judge of the Criminal Court of the City of New York by Mayor Rudolph Giuliani in 1995. She was appointed Acting Justice of the State Supreme Court, 2nd Judicial District in 1998. She was elected as a justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County in 2002. DiMango is one of the three judges on the panel court show Hot Bench, created by Judge Judy Sheindlin, which debuted in September 2014. She is mentioned in a New Yorker article regarding Kalief Browder, a 16-year-old who spent over three years in Rikers Island awaiting trial. According to the article, DiMango was the presiding judge who released Browder on his 31st court appearance. She has also been involved with numerous other high-profile cases, including murders and other crimes committed against children, and hate crimes. 16 Aug 2017 Pictured: Hot Bench Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York. Photo credit: Dan Callister / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA94278_009.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ‘Hot Bench’ Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York State Patricia Mafalda DiMango (born 1953) is a retired justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County, New York. DiMango, a Brooklyn native, earned a Bachelor of Science degree from Brooklyn College at the City University of New York, as well as a Master of Arts degree from Columbia University Teachers College. She received a Juris Doctor degree from the St. John's University School of Law. DiMango was a former college professor and NYC Public School Teacher. DiMango was appointed as a Judge of the Criminal Court of the City of New York by Mayor Rudolph Giuliani in 1995. She was appointed Acting Justice of the State Supreme Court, 2nd Judicial District in 1998. She was elected as a justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County in 2002. DiMango is one of the three judges on the panel court show Hot Bench, created by Judge Judy Sheindlin, which debuted in September 2014. She is mentioned in a New Yorker article regarding Kalief Browder, a 16-year-old who spent over three years in Rikers Island awaiting trial. According to the article, DiMango was the presiding judge who released Browder on his 31st court appearance. She has also been involved with numerous other high-profile cases, including murders and other crimes committed against children, and hate crimes. 16 Aug 2017 Pictured: Hot Bench Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York. Photo credit: Dan Callister / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA94278_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ‘Hot Bench’ Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York State Patricia Mafalda DiMango (born 1953) is a retired justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County, New York. DiMango, a Brooklyn native, earned a Bachelor of Science degree from Brooklyn College at the City University of New York, as well as a Master of Arts degree from Columbia University Teachers College. She received a Juris Doctor degree from the St. John's University School of Law. DiMango was a former college professor and NYC Public School Teacher. DiMango was appointed as a Judge of the Criminal Court of the City of New York by Mayor Rudolph Giuliani in 1995. She was appointed Acting Justice of the State Supreme Court, 2nd Judicial District in 1998. She was elected as a justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County in 2002. DiMango is one of the three judges on the panel court show Hot Bench, created by Judge Judy Sheindlin, which debuted in September 2014. She is mentioned in a New Yorker article regarding Kalief Browder, a 16-year-old who spent over three years in Rikers Island awaiting trial. According to the article, DiMango was the presiding judge who released Browder on his 31st court appearance. She has also been involved with numerous other high-profile cases, including murders and other crimes committed against children, and hate crimes. 16 Aug 2017 Pictured: Hot Bench Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York. Photo credit: Dan Callister / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA94278_012.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ‘Hot Bench’ Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York State Patricia Mafalda DiMango (born 1953) is a retired justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County, New York. DiMango, a Brooklyn native, earned a Bachelor of Science degree from Brooklyn College at the City University of New York, as well as a Master of Arts degree from Columbia University Teachers College. She received a Juris Doctor degree from the St. John's University School of Law. DiMango was a former college professor and NYC Public School Teacher. DiMango was appointed as a Judge of the Criminal Court of the City of New York by Mayor Rudolph Giuliani in 1995. She was appointed Acting Justice of the State Supreme Court, 2nd Judicial District in 1998. She was elected as a justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County in 2002. DiMango is one of the three judges on the panel court show Hot Bench, created by Judge Judy Sheindlin, which debuted in September 2014. She is mentioned in a New Yorker article regarding Kalief Browder, a 16-year-old who spent over three years in Rikers Island awaiting trial. According to the article, DiMango was the presiding judge who released Browder on his 31st court appearance. She has also been involved with numerous other high-profile cases, including murders and other crimes committed against children, and hate crimes. 16 Aug 2017 Pictured: Hot Bench Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York. Photo credit: Dan Callister / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA94278_015.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ‘Hot Bench’ Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York State Patricia Mafalda DiMango (born 1953) is a retired justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County, New York. DiMango, a Brooklyn native, earned a Bachelor of Science degree from Brooklyn College at the City University of New York, as well as a Master of Arts degree from Columbia University Teachers College. She received a Juris Doctor degree from the St. John's University School of Law. DiMango was a former college professor and NYC Public School Teacher. DiMango was appointed as a Judge of the Criminal Court of the City of New York by Mayor Rudolph Giuliani in 1995. She was appointed Acting Justice of the State Supreme Court, 2nd Judicial District in 1998. She was elected as a justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County in 2002. DiMango is one of the three judges on the panel court show Hot Bench, created by Judge Judy Sheindlin, which debuted in September 2014. She is mentioned in a New Yorker article regarding Kalief Browder, a 16-year-old who spent over three years in Rikers Island awaiting trial. According to the article, DiMango was the presiding judge who released Browder on his 31st court appearance. She has also been involved with numerous other high-profile cases, including murders and other crimes committed against children, and hate crimes. 16 Aug 2017 Pictured: Hot Bench Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York. Photo credit: Dan Callister / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA94278_013.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ‘Hot Bench’ Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York State Patricia Mafalda DiMango (born 1953) is a retired justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County, New York. DiMango, a Brooklyn native, earned a Bachelor of Science degree from Brooklyn College at the City University of New York, as well as a Master of Arts degree from Columbia University Teachers College. She received a Juris Doctor degree from the St. John's University School of Law. DiMango was a former college professor and NYC Public School Teacher. DiMango was appointed as a Judge of the Criminal Court of the City of New York by Mayor Rudolph Giuliani in 1995. She was appointed Acting Justice of the State Supreme Court, 2nd Judicial District in 1998. She was elected as a justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County in 2002. DiMango is one of the three judges on the panel court show Hot Bench, created by Judge Judy Sheindlin, which debuted in September 2014. She is mentioned in a New Yorker article regarding Kalief Browder, a 16-year-old who spent over three years in Rikers Island awaiting trial. According to the article, DiMango was the presiding judge who released Browder on his 31st court appearance. She has also been involved with numerous other high-profile cases, including murders and other crimes committed against children, and hate crimes. 16 Aug 2017 Pictured: Hot Bench Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York. Photo credit: Dan Callister / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA94278_014.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ‘Hot Bench’ Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York State Patricia Mafalda DiMango (born 1953) is a retired justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County, New York. DiMango, a Brooklyn native, earned a Bachelor of Science degree from Brooklyn College at the City University of New York, as well as a Master of Arts degree from Columbia University Teachers College. She received a Juris Doctor degree from the St. John's University School of Law. DiMango was a former college professor and NYC Public School Teacher. DiMango was appointed as a Judge of the Criminal Court of the City of New York by Mayor Rudolph Giuliani in 1995. She was appointed Acting Justice of the State Supreme Court, 2nd Judicial District in 1998. She was elected as a justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County in 2002. DiMango is one of the three judges on the panel court show Hot Bench, created by Judge Judy Sheindlin, which debuted in September 2014. She is mentioned in a New Yorker article regarding Kalief Browder, a 16-year-old who spent over three years in Rikers Island awaiting trial. According to the article, DiMango was the presiding judge who released Browder on his 31st court appearance. She has also been involved with numerous other high-profile cases, including murders and other crimes committed against children, and hate crimes. 16 Aug 2017 Pictured: Hot Bench Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York. Photo credit: Dan Callister / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA94278_016.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ‘Hot Bench’ Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York State Patricia Mafalda DiMango (born 1953) is a retired justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County, New York. DiMango, a Brooklyn native, earned a Bachelor of Science degree from Brooklyn College at the City University of New York, as well as a Master of Arts degree from Columbia University Teachers College. She received a Juris Doctor degree from the St. John's University School of Law. DiMango was a former college professor and NYC Public School Teacher. DiMango was appointed as a Judge of the Criminal Court of the City of New York by Mayor Rudolph Giuliani in 1995. She was appointed Acting Justice of the State Supreme Court, 2nd Judicial District in 1998. She was elected as a justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County in 2002. DiMango is one of the three judges on the panel court show Hot Bench, created by Judge Judy Sheindlin, which debuted in September 2014. She is mentioned in a New Yorker article regarding Kalief Browder, a 16-year-old who spent over three years in Rikers Island awaiting trial. According to the article, DiMango was the presiding judge who released Browder on his 31st court appearance. She has also been involved with numerous other high-profile cases, including murders and other crimes committed against children, and hate crimes. 16 Aug 2017 Pictured: Hot Bench Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York. Photo credit: Dan Callister / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA94278_017.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ‘Hot Bench’ Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York State Patricia Mafalda DiMango (born 1953) is a retired justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County, New York. DiMango, a Brooklyn native, earned a Bachelor of Science degree from Brooklyn College at the City University of New York, as well as a Master of Arts degree from Columbia University Teachers College. She received a Juris Doctor degree from the St. John's University School of Law. DiMango was a former college professor and NYC Public School Teacher. DiMango was appointed as a Judge of the Criminal Court of the City of New York by Mayor Rudolph Giuliani in 1995. She was appointed Acting Justice of the State Supreme Court, 2nd Judicial District in 1998. She was elected as a justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County in 2002. DiMango is one of the three judges on the panel court show Hot Bench, created by Judge Judy Sheindlin, which debuted in September 2014. She is mentioned in a New Yorker article regarding Kalief Browder, a 16-year-old who spent over three years in Rikers Island awaiting trial. According to the article, DiMango was the presiding judge who released Browder on his 31st court appearance. She has also been involved with numerous other high-profile cases, including murders and other crimes committed against children, and hate crimes. 16 Aug 2017 Pictured: Hot Bench Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York. Photo credit: Dan Callister / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA94278_018.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: ‘Hot Bench’ Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York State Patricia Mafalda DiMango (born 1953) is a retired justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County, New York. DiMango, a Brooklyn native, earned a Bachelor of Science degree from Brooklyn College at the City University of New York, as well as a Master of Arts degree from Columbia University Teachers College. She received a Juris Doctor degree from the St. John's University School of Law. DiMango was a former college professor and NYC Public School Teacher. DiMango was appointed as a Judge of the Criminal Court of the City of New York by Mayor Rudolph Giuliani in 1995. She was appointed Acting Justice of the State Supreme Court, 2nd Judicial District in 1998. She was elected as a justice of the Supreme Court of Kings County in 2002. DiMango is one of the three judges on the panel court show Hot Bench, created by Judge Judy Sheindlin, which debuted in September 2014. She is mentioned in a New Yorker article regarding Kalief Browder, a 16-year-old who spent over three years in Rikers Island awaiting trial. According to the article, DiMango was the presiding judge who released Browder on his 31st court appearance. She has also been involved with numerous other high-profile cases, including murders and other crimes committed against children, and hate crimes. 16 Aug 2017 Pictured: Hot Bench Judge Patricia Dimango at her Southampton home in New York. Photo credit: Dan Callister / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA94278_020.jpg
  • Jan. 27, 1987 - Washington, District of Columbia, United States of America - Washington DC. 1-27-1987.Oliver Tambo President of the African National Congress waits to deliver his speech at Georgetown University..Oliver Tambo was born on 27 October 1917, his father was Mzimeni and his mother was called Julia. He was born in the village of Nkantolo in Bizana in eastern Pondoland in what is now Eastern Cape. He went to school at Holy Cross Mission School, and then transferred to St. Peters in Johannesburg. After matriculation he qualified to do his university degree at Fort Hare University. In 1940 he, along with several others including Nelson Mandela, was expelled from Fort Hare University for participating in a student strike. In 1942 Tambo returned to his former high school in Johannesburg to teach science and mathematics.Tambo, along with Mandela and Walter Sisulu, was a founding member of the ANC Youth League in 1943, becoming its first National Secretary and later a member of the National Executive in 1948. The youth league proposed a change in tactics in the anti-apartheid movement. Previously the ANC had sought to further its cause by actions such as petitions and demonstrations; the Youth League felt these actions were insufficient to achieve the group's goals and proposed their own 'Programme of Action'. This programme advocated tactics such as boycotts, civil disobedience, strikes and non-collaboration..Tambo being greeted on arrival in East Germany (1978).In 1955, Tambo became Secretary General of the ANC after Walter Sisulu was banned by the South African government under the Suppression of Communism Act. In 1958 he became Deputy President of the ANC and in 1959 was served with a five-year banning order by the government..In response, Tambo was sent abroad by the ANC to mobilise opposition to apartheid. He settled with his family in Muswell Hill, north London, where he lived until 1990. He was involved in the formation of the South African Democratic Fron
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  • June 16, 2017 - La Jolla, US - His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama speaks at.UC San Diego UCSD..He describes himself as a simple Buddhist monk. But to the world he is a renowned peace advocate, a beacon of hope for humanity, sharing inspirational messages with international audiences that range from young students to world leaders..His Holiness has received 72 honorary doctorate degrees for his contributions to the fields of Neuroscience, Humanities, Buddhist Science, Humane Arts & Letters, Oriental Studies, Theology, Divinity, Diplomatic Science, Chemistry, Pharmacy, Law and Philosophy. He is also a prolific writer, having authored 80 books, with over 200 publications, translated into 63 languages. To date, His Holiness has spoken at 146 Universities worldwide..This was his first visit in ten years. (Credit Image: © Daren Fentiman via ZUMA Wire)
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  • March 8, 2018 - Birmingham, England, United Kingdom - 3/8/18.Prince Harry and Meghan Markle attend an event at Millennium Point to celebrate International Women''s Day in Birmingham on 8th March 2018..The event aims to inspire the next generation of young women to pursue careers in Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths (STEM). Hosted by social enterprise Stemettes, the event will bring together female students from local secondary schools and include interactive activities, a panel discussion, speed networking opportunities with local businesses, and information on work experience, apprenticeships, A-level choices, and university degrees in STEM. Prince Harry and Ms. Markle will join the young women as they take part in building apps and touchpads, before hearing more about their motivations to pursue STEM subjects. (Credit Image: © Starmax/Newscom via ZUMA Press)
    20180308_zaa_nc34_107.jpg
  • March 8, 2018 - Birmingham, England, United Kingdom - 3/8/18.Prince Harry and Meghan Markle attend an event at Millennium Point to celebrate International Women''s Day in Birmingham on 8th March 2018..The event aims to inspire the next generation of young women to pursue careers in Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths (STEM). Hosted by social enterprise Stemettes, the event will bring together female students from local secondary schools and include interactive activities, a panel discussion, speed networking opportunities with local businesses, and information on work experience, apprenticeships, A-level choices, and university degrees in STEM. Prince Harry and Ms. Markle will join the young women as they take part in building apps and touchpads, before hearing more about their motivations to pursue STEM subjects. (Credit Image: © Starmax/Newscom via ZUMA Press)
    20180308_zaa_nc34_105.jpg
  • March 8, 2018 - Birmingham, England, United Kingdom - 3/8/18.Prince Harry and Meghan Markle attend an event at Millennium Point to celebrate International Women''s Day in Birmingham on 8th March 2018..The event aims to inspire the next generation of young women to pursue careers in Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths (STEM). Hosted by social enterprise Stemettes, the event will bring together female students from local secondary schools and include interactive activities, a panel discussion, speed networking opportunities with local businesses, and information on work experience, apprenticeships, A-level choices, and university degrees in STEM. Prince Harry and Ms. Markle will join the young women as they take part in building apps and touchpads, before hearing more about their motivations to pursue STEM subjects. (Credit Image: © Starmax/Newscom via ZUMA Press)
    20180308_zaa_nc34_096.jpg
  • March 8, 2018 - Birmingham, England, United Kingdom - 3/8/18.Prince Harry and Meghan Markle attend an event at Millennium Point to celebrate International Women''s Day in Birmingham on 8th March 2018..The event aims to inspire the next generation of young women to pursue careers in Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths (STEM). Hosted by social enterprise Stemettes, the event will bring together female students from local secondary schools and include interactive activities, a panel discussion, speed networking opportunities with local businesses, and information on work experience, apprenticeships, A-level choices, and university degrees in STEM. Prince Harry and Ms. Markle will join the young women as they take part in building apps and touchpads, before hearing more about their motivations to pursue STEM subjects. (Credit Image: © Starmax/Newscom via ZUMA Press)
    20180308_zaa_nc34_087.jpg
  • March 8, 2018 - Birmingham, England, United Kingdom - 3/8/18.Prince Harry and Meghan Markle attend an event at Millennium Point to celebrate International Women''s Day in Birmingham on 8th March 2018..The event aims to inspire the next generation of young women to pursue careers in Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths (STEM). Hosted by social enterprise Stemettes, the event will bring together female students from local secondary schools and include interactive activities, a panel discussion, speed networking opportunities with local businesses, and information on work experience, apprenticeships, A-level choices, and university degrees in STEM. Prince Harry and Ms. Markle will join the young women as they take part in building apps and touchpads, before hearing more about their motivations to pursue STEM subjects. (Credit Image: © Starmax/Newscom via ZUMA Press)
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  • May 19, 2017 - Space - JunoCam images aren't just for art and science, sometimes they are processed to bring a chuckle.  This image, processed by citizen scientist Jason Major, is titled 'Jovey McJupiterface.' By rotating the image 180 degrees and orienting it from south up, two white oval storms turn into eyeballs, and the 'face' of Jupiter is revealed.  The original image was acquired by JunoCam on NASA's Juno spacecraft on May 19, 2017 at 11:20 a.m. PT (2: 20 p.m. ET) from an altitude of 12,075 miles (19,433 kilometers). (Credit Image: © NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS/ZUMA Wire/ZUMAPRESS.com)
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  • March 8, 2018 - Birmingham, England, United Kingdom - 3/8/18.Prince Harry and Meghan Markle attend an event at Millennium Point to celebrate International Women''s Day in Birmingham on 8th March 2018..The event aims to inspire the next generation of young women to pursue careers in Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths (STEM). Hosted by social enterprise Stemettes, the event will bring together female students from local secondary schools and include interactive activities, a panel discussion, speed networking opportunities with local businesses, and information on work experience, apprenticeships, A-level choices, and university degrees in STEM. Prince Harry and Ms. Markle will join the young women as they take part in building apps and touchpads, before hearing more about their motivations to pursue STEM subjects. (Credit Image: © Starmax/Newscom via ZUMA Press)
    20180308_zaa_nc34_112.jpg
  • March 8, 2018 - Birmingham, England, United Kingdom - 3/8/18.Prince Harry and Meghan Markle attend an event at Millennium Point to celebrate International Women''s Day in Birmingham on 8th March 2018..The event aims to inspire the next generation of young women to pursue careers in Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths (STEM). Hosted by social enterprise Stemettes, the event will bring together female students from local secondary schools and include interactive activities, a panel discussion, speed networking opportunities with local businesses, and information on work experience, apprenticeships, A-level choices, and university degrees in STEM. Prince Harry and Ms. Markle will join the young women as they take part in building apps and touchpads, before hearing more about their motivations to pursue STEM subjects. (Credit Image: © Starmax/Newscom via ZUMA Press)
    20180308_zaa_nc34_113.jpg
  • March 8, 2018 - Birmingham, England, United Kingdom - 3/8/18.Prince Harry and Meghan Markle attend an event at Millennium Point to celebrate International Women''s Day in Birmingham on 8th March 2018..The event aims to inspire the next generation of young women to pursue careers in Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths (STEM). Hosted by social enterprise Stemettes, the event will bring together female students from local secondary schools and include interactive activities, a panel discussion, speed networking opportunities with local businesses, and information on work experience, apprenticeships, A-level choices, and university degrees in STEM. Prince Harry and Ms. Markle will join the young women as they take part in building apps and touchpads, before hearing more about their motivations to pursue STEM subjects. (Credit Image: © Starmax/Newscom via ZUMA Press)
    20180308_zaa_nc34_111.jpg
  • March 8, 2018 - Birmingham, England, United Kingdom - 3/8/18.Prince Harry and Meghan Markle attend an event at Millennium Point to celebrate International Women''s Day in Birmingham on 8th March 2018..The event aims to inspire the next generation of young women to pursue careers in Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths (STEM). Hosted by social enterprise Stemettes, the event will bring together female students from local secondary schools and include interactive activities, a panel discussion, speed networking opportunities with local businesses, and information on work experience, apprenticeships, A-level choices, and university degrees in STEM. Prince Harry and Ms. Markle will join the young women as they take part in building apps and touchpads, before hearing more about their motivations to pursue STEM subjects. (Credit Image: © Starmax/Newscom via ZUMA Press)
    20180308_zaa_nc34_110.jpg
  • March 8, 2018 - Birmingham, England, United Kingdom - 3/8/18.Prince Harry and Meghan Markle attend an event at Millennium Point to celebrate International Women''s Day in Birmingham on 8th March 2018..The event aims to inspire the next generation of young women to pursue careers in Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths (STEM). Hosted by social enterprise Stemettes, the event will bring together female students from local secondary schools and include interactive activities, a panel discussion, speed networking opportunities with local businesses, and information on work experience, apprenticeships, A-level choices, and university degrees in STEM. Prince Harry and Ms. Markle will join the young women as they take part in building apps and touchpads, before hearing more about their motivations to pursue STEM subjects. (Credit Image: © Starmax/Newscom via ZUMA Press)
    20180308_zaa_nc34_090.jpg
  • March 8, 2018 - Birmingham, England, United Kingdom - 3/8/18.Prince Harry and Meghan Markle attend an event at Millennium Point to celebrate International Women''s Day in Birmingham on 8th March 2018..The event aims to inspire the next generation of young women to pursue careers in Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths (STEM). Hosted by social enterprise Stemettes, the event will bring together female students from local secondary schools and include interactive activities, a panel discussion, speed networking opportunities with local businesses, and information on work experience, apprenticeships, A-level choices, and university degrees in STEM. Prince Harry and Ms. Markle will join the young women as they take part in building apps and touchpads, before hearing more about their motivations to pursue STEM subjects. (Credit Image: © Starmax/Newscom via ZUMA Press)
    20180308_zaa_nc34_102.jpg
  • March 8, 2018 - Birmingham, England, United Kingdom - 3/8/18.Prince Harry and Meghan Markle attend an event at Millennium Point to celebrate International Women''s Day in Birmingham on 8th March 2018..The event aims to inspire the next generation of young women to pursue careers in Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths (STEM). Hosted by social enterprise Stemettes, the event will bring together female students from local secondary schools and include interactive activities, a panel discussion, speed networking opportunities with local businesses, and information on work experience, apprenticeships, A-level choices, and university degrees in STEM. Prince Harry and Ms. Markle will join the young women as they take part in building apps and touchpads, before hearing more about their motivations to pursue STEM subjects. (Credit Image: © Starmax/Newscom via ZUMA Press)
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  • March 8, 2018 - Birmingham, England, United Kingdom - 3/8/18.Prince Harry and Meghan Markle attend an event at Millennium Point to celebrate International Women''s Day in Birmingham on 8th March 2018..The event aims to inspire the next generation of young women to pursue careers in Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths (STEM). Hosted by social enterprise Stemettes, the event will bring together female students from local secondary schools and include interactive activities, a panel discussion, speed networking opportunities with local businesses, and information on work experience, apprenticeships, A-level choices, and university degrees in STEM. Prince Harry and Ms. Markle will join the young women as they take part in building apps and touchpads, before hearing more about their motivations to pursue STEM subjects. (Credit Image: © Starmax/Newscom via ZUMA Press)
    20180308_zaa_nc34_092.jpg
  • March 8, 2018 - Birmingham, England, United Kingdom - 3/8/18.Prince Harry and Meghan Markle attend an event at Millennium Point to celebrate International Women''s Day in Birmingham on 8th March 2018..The event aims to inspire the next generation of young women to pursue careers in Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths (STEM). Hosted by social enterprise Stemettes, the event will bring together female students from local secondary schools and include interactive activities, a panel discussion, speed networking opportunities with local businesses, and information on work experience, apprenticeships, A-level choices, and university degrees in STEM. Prince Harry and Ms. Markle will join the young women as they take part in building apps and touchpads, before hearing more about their motivations to pursue STEM subjects. (Credit Image: © Starmax/Newscom via ZUMA Press)
    20180308_zaa_nc34_089.jpg
  • March 8, 2018 - Birmingham, England, United Kingdom - 3/8/18.Prince Harry and Meghan Markle attend an event at Millennium Point to celebrate International Women''s Day in Birmingham on 8th March 2018..The event aims to inspire the next generation of young women to pursue careers in Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths (STEM). Hosted by social enterprise Stemettes, the event will bring together female students from local secondary schools and include interactive activities, a panel discussion, speed networking opportunities with local businesses, and information on work experience, apprenticeships, A-level choices, and university degrees in STEM. Prince Harry and Ms. Markle will join the young women as they take part in building apps and touchpads, before hearing more about their motivations to pursue STEM subjects. (Credit Image: © Starmax/Newscom via ZUMA Press)
    20180308_zaa_nc34_088.jpg
  • March 8, 2018 - Birmingham, England, United Kingdom - 3/8/18.Prince Harry and Meghan Markle attend an event at Millennium Point to celebrate International Women''s Day in Birmingham on 8th March 2018..The event aims to inspire the next generation of young women to pursue careers in Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths (STEM). Hosted by social enterprise Stemettes, the event will bring together female students from local secondary schools and include interactive activities, a panel discussion, speed networking opportunities with local businesses, and information on work experience, apprenticeships, A-level choices, and university degrees in STEM. Prince Harry and Ms. Markle will join the young women as they take part in building apps and touchpads, before hearing more about their motivations to pursue STEM subjects. (Credit Image: © Starmax/Newscom via ZUMA Press)
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  • Paralympian Ellie Simmonds receives an honorary degree from Swansea University during the degree ceremony for the College of Human and Health Sciences in the Great Hall at the university.
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  • Paralympian Ellie Simmonds receives an honorary degree from Swansea University during the degree ceremony for the College of Human and Health Sciences in the Great Hall at the university.
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  • Paralympian Ellie Simmonds before she received an honorary degree from Swansea University during the degree ceremony for the College of Human and Health Sciences in the Great Hall at the university.
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  • Paralympian Ellie Simmonds receives an honorary degree from Swansea University during the degree ceremony for the College of Human and Health Sciences in the Great Hall at the university.
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  • Paralympian Ellie Simmonds receives an honorary degree from Swansea University during the degree ceremony for the College of Human and Health Sciences in the Great Hall at the university.
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  • Paralympian Ellie Simmonds receives an honorary degree from Swansea University during the degree ceremony for the College of Human and Health Sciences in the Great Hall at the university.
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  • Paralympian Ellie Simmonds receives an honorary degree from Swansea University during the degree ceremony for the College of Human and Health Sciences in the Great Hall at the university.
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  • Paralympian Ellie Simmonds receives an honorary degree from Swansea University during the degree ceremony for the College of Human and Health Sciences in the Great Hall at the university.
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