Nowadays, there is only one way to get rich, become famous and go down in history as a photographer - by doing anything but photography. A hundred years ago you could easily become a great photographer, since there were two key prerequisites:

A. photography was a complex, troublesome and little-known craft;

b. Technologies gradually emerged and were introduced that made it possible to reproduce photographs in newspapers and (a little later) in color magazines.

That is, the glorious moment came when, having pressed the shutter button, you already understood that this frame would be seen by millions. But these millions did not yet know that they could do the same thing, since there were no digital point-and-shoot cameras, full automation and photo dumps on the Internet. Well, and talent, of course. You have no competition!

The golden era of photography, perhaps, should be recognized as the middle of the last century. However, many of the artists listed on our list belong to other distant and modern eras.


Helmut Newton, Germany, 1920–2004

A little more than a great and famous fashion photographer with a very, very independent understanding of what eroticism is. He was fiercely in demand by almost all glossy magazines, Vogue, Elle and Playboy in the first place. He died at 84 after crashing his car into a concrete wall at full speed.

Richard Avedon, USA, 1923–2004

The god of black and white portraits, also interesting because delving into his galleries, you will find anyone. The photographs of this brilliant New York Jew have absolutely everything. They say that Richard took his first photograph at the age of nine, when the little boy accidentally caught Sergei Rachmaninoff in his lens.

Henri Cartier-Bresson, France, 1908–2004

An outstanding photorealist, one of the patriarchs of photo reporting, and at the same time an invisible man: he had a delicately developed gift for being able to remain noticeable to those he photographed. At first he studied to be an artist, where he developed a craving for light surrealism, which was then tangibly imprinted in his photographs.

Sebastian Salgado, Brazil, 1944

The creator of almost fantastic images, actually taken from the real world. Salgado was a photojournalist who was especially drawn to anomalies, misfortunes, poverty and environmental disasters - but even such his subjects are mesmerizing in their beauty. In 2014, director Wim Wenders made a film about him called “The Salt of the Earth” (special prize at the Cannes Film Festival).

William Eugene Smith, USA, 1918–1978

A photojournalist, perhaps famous for everything a photojournalist can become famous for - from canonical war photographs to expressive and touching portraits of great and ordinary people. Below is an example of footage from a session with Charlie Chaplin for Life magazine.

Guy Bourdin, France, 1928–1991

One of the most copied and imitated photographers in the world. Erotic, surreal. Now - a quarter of a century after his death - it is increasingly relevant and modern.

Weegee (Arthur Fellig), USA, 1899–1968

An emigrant from Eastern Europe, now a great classic of street and crime photography. The man managed to arrive at any incident in New York - be it a fire, murder or a banal massacre - faster than other paparazzi and, often, the police. However, besides all kinds of emergencies, his photographs show almost all aspects of life in the poorest neighborhoods of the metropolis. The noir film Naked City (1945) was based on his photo, Stanley Kubrick studied on his photos, and Weegee himself is mentioned at the beginning of the comic film Watchmen (2009).

Alexander Rodchenko, USSR, 1891–1956

A pioneer of Soviet design and advertising, Rodchenko is, at the same time, a pioneer of constructivism. Expelled from the Union of Artists for departing from the ideals and style of socialist realism, but, fortunately, it did not come to the camps - he died a natural death at the dawn of Khrushchev’s “thaw”.

Irving Penn, USA, 1917–2009

Master of portrait and fashion genre. He is famous for his abundance of his signature tricks - for example, photographing people in the corner of a room or against all sorts of gray, ascetic backgrounds. He is famous for the catchphrase: “Shooting a cake can also be art.”

Anton Corbijn, Netherlands, 1955

The world's most prominent rock photographer, whose rise began with iconic photographs and video clips for Depeche Mode and U2. His style is easily recognizable - strong defocus and atmospheric noise. Corbijn also directed several films: Control (a biography of the Joy Division frontman), The American (with George Clooney) and A Most Dangerous Man (based on the novel by Le Carré). If you search for famous photos of Nirvana, Metallica or Tom Waits on Google, there is almost a 100% chance that Corbijn's will come up first.

Steven Meisel, USA, 1954

One of the most successful fashion photographers in the world, who became especially popular in 1992 after the release of Madonna’s photo book “Sex”. Considered the discoverer of many catwalk superstars such as Naomi Campbell, Linda Evangelista or Amber Valletta.

Diane Arbus, USA, 1923–1971

Her real name is Diana Nemerova, and she found her niche in photography by working with the most unsightly people - freaks, dwarfs, transvestites, the weak-minded... At best, with nudists. In 2006, the biographical film Fur was released, in which Nicole Kidman played the role of Diana.

David LaChapelle, USA, 1963

A master of pop photography (“pop” in the good sense of the word), LaChapelle, in particular, shot videos for Britney Spears, Jennifer Lopez and Christina Aguilera, so you will understand his style not only from photographs.

Marc Riboud, France, (1923-2016)

The author of at least a dozen “epoch prints”: you’ve probably seen a million times a hippie girl bringing a daisy to the barrel of a rifle. Riboud has traveled all over the world and is most revered for his portfolio of filming in China and Vietnam, although you can also find his scenes from the life of the Soviet Union. Died at the age of 93.

Elliott Erwitt, France, 1928

A Frenchman with Russian roots, famous for his ironic and absurd view of our troubled world, which is very moving in his still photographs. Not long ago, he also began exhibiting in galleries under the name André S. Solidor, which in abbreviation reads “ass.”

Patrick Demarchelier, France/USA, 1943

Still a living classic of fashion photography, he has enriched this genre with a particularly complex sophistication. And at the same time, he reduced the prohibitive degree of glamorous overdress, which was the norm before him.

Annie Leibovitz, USA, 1949

A master of fairy-tale plots with a very powerful charge of wit, understandable even to simpletons who are far from hyper-glamour. Which is not surprising, since lesbian Annie started out as a staff photographer for Rolling Stone magazine.

Everyone has seen these pictures: a selection of the most famous and most impressive photographs that have repeatedly flown around the world.
“The most famous photograph that no one has seen,” is what Associated Press photographer Richard Drew calls his photograph of one of the World Trade Center victims who jumped from a window to his death on September 11

Malcolm Brown, a 30-year-old photographer from New York, followed an anonymous tip to photograph the self-immolation of Buddhist monk Thich Quang Duc, which became a sign of protest against repression of Buddhists.

The 21-week fetus, which was due to be born last December, was in the womb before spinal surgery began. At this age, the child can still be legally aborted.

The death of the Al-Dura boy, filmed by a television station reporter as he is shot by Israeli soldiers while in the arms of his father.

Photographer Kevin Carter won a Pulitzer Prize for his photograph "Famine in Sudan," taken in early spring 1993. On this day, Carter specially flew to Sudan to film scenes of famine in a small village.

A Jewish settler confronts Israeli police as they enforce a Supreme Court decision to dismantle nine houses at the outpost of Amona settlement, West Bank, February 1, 2006.

A 12-year-old Afghan girl is a famous photograph taken by Steve McCurry in a refugee camp on the Afghanistan-Pakistan border.

July 22, 1975, Boston. A girl and a woman fall trying to escape a fire. Photo by Stanley Forman/Boston Herald, USA.

"Unknown Rebel" in Tiananmen Square. This famous photo, taken by Associated Press photographer Jeff Widene, shows a protester who single-handedly held off a tank column for half an hour.

The girl Teresa, who grew up in a concentration camp, draws a "house" on the board. 1948, Poland. Author - David Seymour.

The terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 were a series of coordinated suicide terrorist attacks that occurred in the United States. According to the official version, responsibility for these attacks lies with the Islamist terrorist organization Al-Qaeda.

Frozen Niagara Falls. Photo from 1911.

April 1980, UK. Karamoja region, Uganda. Hungry boy and missionary. Photo by Mike Wells.

White and Colored, photograph by Elliott Erwitt, 1950.

Young Lebanese men drive through a devastated area of ​​Beirut on August 15, 2006. Photo by Spencer Platt.

The photograph of an officer shooting a handcuffed prisoner in the head not only won a Pulitzer Prize in 1969, but also changed the way Americans think about what happened in Vietnam.

Lynching, 1930. This photo was taken as a mob of 10,000 whites hanged two black men for raping a white woman and murdering her boyfriend. Author: Lawrence Beitler.

At the end of April 2004, the CBS program 60 Minutes II aired a story about the torture and abuse of prisoners at Abu Ghraib prison by a group of American soldiers. This became the biggest scandal surrounding the American presence in Iraq.

Burial of an unknown child. On December 3, 1984, the Indian city of Bhopal suffered from the largest man-made disaster in human history: a giant toxic cloud released into the atmosphere by an American pesticide plant killed more than 18 thousand people.

Photographer and scientist Lennart Nilsson gained international fame in 1965 when LIFE magazine published 16 pages of photographs of a human embryo.

Photo of the Loch Ness monster, 1934. Author: Ian Wetherell.

Riveters. The photo was taken on September 29, 1932, on the 69th floor of Rockefeller Center during the final months of construction.

Surgeon Jay Vacanti from Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston in 1997 managed to grow a human ear on the back of a mouse using cartilage cells.

Freezing rain can form a thick layer of ice on any object, even destroying giant power poles. The photo shows the consequences of freezing rain in Switzerland.

A man tries to alleviate the difficult conditions for his son in a prison for prisoners of war. March 31, 2003. An Najaf, Iraq.

Dolly is a female sheep, the first mammal successfully cloned from the cell of another adult creature. The experiment was carried out in Great Britain, where she was born on July 5, 1996.

The Patterson-Gimlin film's 1967 documentary film of a female Bigfoot, the American Bigfoot, is still the only clear photographic evidence of the existence of living relict hominids on earth.

Republican soldier Federico Borel García is depicted facing death. The photo caused a huge shock in society. The author of the photo is Robert Capa.

The photo, taken by reporter Alberto Korda at a rally in 1960, claims to be the most circulated photo in the history of photography.

The photograph showing the hoisting of the Victory Banner over the Reichstag spread throughout the world. 1945 Author - Evgeny Khaldey.

Death of a Nazi functionary and his family. The father of the family killed his wife and children, then shot himself. 1945, Vienna.

For millions of Americans, this photograph, which photographer Alfred Eisenstaedt called “Unconditional Surrender,” symbolized the end of World War II.

The assassination of the thirty-fifth President of the United States, John Kennedy, took place on Friday, November 22, 1963 in Dallas, Texas, at 12:30 local time.

On December 30, 2006, ex-president Saddam Hussein was executed in Iraq. The Supreme Court has sentenced the former Iraqi leader to death by hanging. The sentence was carried out at 6 a.m. in a suburb of Baghdad.

American soldiers drag the body of a Viet Cong (South Vietnamese rebel) soldier on a leash. February 24, 1966, Tan Binh, South Vietnam.

A young boy looks out of a bus loaded with refugees who fled the epicenter of the war between Chechen separatists and Russians, near Shali, Chechnya. The bus returns to Grozny. May 1995. Chechnya

Terry the cat and Thomson the dog are dividing who will be the first to start eating Jim the hamster. The owner of the animals and the author of this wonderful photograph, American Mark Andrew, claims that no one was hurt during the photo shoot.

French photographer Henry Cartier Bresson, who is considered one of the founders of the genre of photo reporting and photojournalism, took this shot in Beijing in the winter of 1948. The photograph shows children queuing for rice.

Photographer Bert Stern became the last person to photograph Marilyn Monroe. A few weeks after the photo shoot, the actress passed away.

There were times when alcohol was sold to children - all the parent had to do was write a note. In this shot, the boy proudly walks home, carrying two bottles of wine to his father.

The English Rugby Championship final in 1975 gave rise to the so-called streaking, when naked people run onto the field in the middle of a sporting event. A fun hobby, and nothing more.

In 1950, at the height of the Korean War, General MacArthur, when the Chinese launched a counteroffensive, realized that he had overestimated the capabilities of his troops. It was then that he uttered his most famous phrase: “We retreat! For we are moving in the wrong direction!”

This photograph of Winston Churchill was taken on January 27, 1941 in a photographic studio in Downing Street. Churchill wanted to show the world the resilience and determination of the British during World War II.

This photograph was made into a postcard and was for a long time the most popular postcard in America. The photograph shows three girls with dolls arguing furiously about something in an alley in Sevilla (Spain).

Two boys collect the fragments of a mirror, which they themselves had previously broken. And life is still in full swing around.

Photographer is a profession that appeared less than two centuries ago. During this time, its representatives managed to gain popularity and respect throughout the world. The best photographers in Russia today are valued and earn good money. And this despite the fact that today almost everyone has a digital camera. It is all the more important to know and understand who you need to follow.

Profession: photographer

The best photographers in Russia are creative people who know how to cope with the difficult and constantly changing environment that is photography. It is worth recognizing that nowadays it has become much easier to make a career in this business. Firstly, high-quality mass technologies have appeared that allow many people to do high-quality work.

Secondly, especially on the Internet, it has developed so much that it is possible to declare and advertise yourself much faster and easier than it had to be done in previous years. Nowadays, any aspiring photographer who shows talent can quickly make himself known to the whole world.

Digital technologies have brought another plus to modern life. Creating and distributing content has become easier and more accessible. Beginning photographers have free access to the works of the best masters and have the opportunity to follow new fashion trends and trends. The main thing is not to forget that a real master must also have his own look and vision in order to conquer the public. It is these skills that the best photographers in Russia are famous for. The rating of these specialists is headed by Andrey Baida. This list also includes Abdulla Artuev, Viktor Danilov, Alexander Sakulin, Denis Shumov, Larisa Sakhapova, Alexey Sizganov, Maria Melnik.

Andrey Baida

The best wedding photographers in Russia are welcome guests at any celebration. Andrei Baida certainly belongs to them. He manages to capture the most unforgettable and amazing moments of the reality around us. He is one of the most famous wedding photographers in the capital. His portfolio includes thousands of photographs taken in all corners of the globe.

He himself admits that photography for him is not just a job, but a hobby to which he devotes his entire life. He became interested in photography as a child. Then, of course, I didn’t think about genres yet, but filmed everything I saw.

Now a division into genres has appeared, but Andrey is trying not to concentrate on just one, but to work in different ones in order to constantly improve.

Abdulla Artuev

The list of the best photographers in Russia, according to many specialists and experts, includes Abdulla Artuev. This is one of the most promising young artists in the capital, who made a name for himself by working for glossy publications. It is noticeable that he puts not only skill and professionalism into his work, but also his soul.

Victor Danilov

Many of Russia's best photographers today deliberately go to social networks, where they collect tens of thousands of likes and subscribers. One of those who made a name for themselves on Instagram was Viktor Danilov. This is a modern fashion photographer who works with models and girls who dream of getting on the catwalk.

Today he has about 50 thousand subscribers on Instagram, which brings him popularity in professional circles and in public. Danilov has long earned fame in fashion houses; his photographs are readily featured on the front pages.

At the same time, he is a very young photographer. He is a little over 20 years old.

Alexander Sakulin

The best photographer in Russia, according to some experts, is Alexander Sakulin. This master specializes in advertising photographs. He often shoots for major business magazines and is ready to present almost any product in a favorable and original light.

Sakulin says about himself that he grew up in the Far East, far from the lights of big cities. He moved to Moscow after serving in the army. At first I started taking photographs for fun, but soon my hobby grew into a profession. Sakulin constantly improved, went to exhibitions, studied albums of recognized masters. This desire to reach the bar set by professionals allowed him to enter the top of the best photographers in Russia.

In 2009, Sakulin began producing advertising projects. Photographed various popular brands. For example, the products of the famous watch manufacturer Ulysse Nardin.

He began his independent photography career in 2012. Collaborated with modeling agencies, online stores, fashion designers and online electronic publications.

In 2014, he founded his own agency, which specialized in commercial photography. Was engaged in the production of printed products and object photography. Since then, he has regularly filmed major popular projects of famous advertising brands.

Denis Shumov

If you are looking for a unique and unusual representative of the school of modern photography, then you should pay attention to the works of Denis Shumov. This is a versatile photographer who, despite his young age, has already achieved success in shooting models and advertising. His travel portfolio attracts the attention of hundreds of fans.

In fact, Shumov manages to do the almost impossible - to combine in his work all known areas of modern photography. But this is not the only thing the master is famous for. Among his photographs you can find hundreds of works with domestic and Hollywood celebrities who willingly worked with the young and talented photographer.

Larisa Sakhapova

Master Larisa Sakhapova appeared on the domestic photo horizon relatively recently. Her portfolio is filled with photographs of the most charming and attractive Russian girls. You need to be able to capture true beauty. Larisa proves every day that she is capable of doing this.

In all her photographs you can notice an amazing feature; she knows how to subtly notice the most unexpected features of female beauty and bring them to the fore. The tenderness and grace of her models are simply mesmerizing. No one remains indifferent.

Maria Simonova

You have already noticed that the best photographers in Russia are not only men, but also women. Recently, many talented girls have appeared in this profession who take a new look at things that are familiar to everyone.

Maria Simonova exceeds all our wildest expectations. Her fame spread not only to Moscow, but also to America. She works overseas as a fashion photographer. She is regularly invited to fashion shows, models call Maria, to create a bright and high-quality portfolio. For example, Jared Leto and Nick Wooster already worship her camera.

Maria Simonova is also a wonderful family master. The best children's photographers in Russia celebrate her work, which depicts happy families with their babies.

She notes to herself that her passion is individual photography. It is when you work with a person one on one that he can fully open up and reveal the most secretive sides of his personality. And that's great.

Elena Melnik

Speaking about the most promising and talented photographers, one cannot fail to mention Elena Melnik. She has a special place in this list. Her works are distinguished by the fact that they reveal an individual, independent direction of photography. A direction that practically no one had developed before Elena.

This is food photography. Elena Melnik is the brightest representative of this field of photography. At one time, food pictures filled social networks, especially Instagram. Elena Melnik proves by her own example that even a plate of food can be an object of art. For this reason, today the best Moscow restaurants dream of getting it. After all, Elena’s photographs often evoke a conditioned reflex, like Pavlov’s dogs, as many visitors to her exhibitions admit. After viewing these pictures, your mouth waters so much that you want to immediately try all the captured dishes.

In her works, she pays special attention to the appetizing nature of food, the colors and colors that accompany the presentation of the dish. To force a person to go to the restaurant where she just completed a photo shoot is her ultimate goal, Elena Melnik herself admits.

Elena has been photographing professionally for 10 years. She has a diploma in her specialty. Personal exhibitions were held several times.

Of course, the photographers listed in this article are not all the talented and original masters that exist in Russia. However, the most famous, those who have gained fame in recent years, are mentioned here.

The year of photography's origin is considered to be 1939. Since that time, photography techniques and the concept itself have changed dramatically. Regardless of when the photograph was taken, some of them have left an unforgettable mark on history. We present to your attention the most famous photographs.

National Geographic photographer Steve McCurry captured an Afghan girl in his famous photo. In 2002, the girl was found and her name became known - Sharbat Gula. In 1985, a photograph of a refugee girl appeared on the cover of National Geographic, after which it gained worldwide fame and became a symbol of the suffering of refugees around the world.

The photograph of the Legendary Fab Four was taken on August 8, 1969. The photo was created as the cover for the band's latest 12th album. And what’s interesting is that it took exactly 6 minutes for this shot. Impressionable fans saw in the photo many signs that confirmed the death of Paul Macartney. According to them, the photo shows a double of the musician, and Paul himself died. The photo composition itself is a symbolic presentation of the funeral. The closed strip of the musician, he walks barefoot and out of step with the other participants. Paul was left-handed and could not hold a cigarette in his right hand. Well, the cigarette itself is a sign of the nail in the coffin. But in reality the photograph symbolized only one death. The Beatles were in the process of breaking up. The 12th album is the last collaboration.

The photograph is called The Torment of Omaira. The girl, Omaira Sanchaz, was trapped by a concrete wall after the eruption of the Nevado del Ruiz volcano (Colombia) in 1895. For 3 days, rescuers tried to save the child. The photo was taken a few hours before her death.

The photo of John Lennon and Yoko Ono became famous because it was taken a few hours before the murder of the musician. The photo became the cover of Rolling Stone magazine. The photo belongs to the famous American photographer Annie Leibovitz, who has worked with Rolling Stone since 1970.

Mike Wells, UK. April 1980. Karamoja region, Uganda. A starving boy and a missionary.

For this photograph, photographer Kevin Carter was awarded the Pulitzer Prize. The photo is called “Famine in Sudan.” After the photograph was published in the New York Times Magazine on March 26, 1993, it became a symbol of Africa's tragedy. Probably everyone has a question: what happened to the girl next? Why didn't they help her? HER fate is unknown. Kevin Carter didn't help the dying girl. In 1994, the author of the photo committed suicide.

"Rhine II" by Andreas Gursky. The photo was taken in 1999. The photo shows the Rhine between the dams under an overcast sky. An interesting fact is that the photo was taken using Photoshop. Gursky deleted
power plant, port facilities and a passerby walking his dog. At the Christie's auction in New York, $4,338,500 was paid for the photograph. This is the most expensive photograph in history.

Albert Einstein with his tongue hanging out. The reason for this action of the scientist was his attitude towards annoying journalists and photographers. The photo was taken at the celebration of the scientist’s 72nd birthday in 1951. Photography is a kind of symbol and calling card of Albert Einstein, capable of joking and joy.

Switzerland. The photo shows the consequences of freezing rain. If you do not take into account how much destruction this rain brought, this phenomenon is of extraordinary beauty.

The legendary photo “Lunch on a Skyscraper.” At a skyscraper construction site, eleven workers are having lunch at an altitude of 200 meters. None of them express even an ounce of concern. In early publications the photographer's name was not indicated. But some experts claim that the author of the work is Lewis Hine. His portfolio includes many photographs of the construction of Rockefeller Center.

This amazing photo was taken in 1948 without the use of Photoshop or technology. It is customary to call it Dali and cats. Photographer Phillip Halsman was Dalí's friend for 30 years.

The photograph is the most circulated photograph in history. The creator of the masterpiece is Alberto Korda. The photo with Che Guevara has turned into a kind of brand. The image of the Cuban revolutionary can be found on all kinds of objects: clothes, dishes, badges, etc.

November 25, 1963 President John F. Kennedy's funeral and his son's birthday. In the photo, John Kennedy Jr. salutes his father's coffin.

Dolly the sheep is the world's first successfully cloned mammal. Dolly was born on July 5, 1996 as a result of an experiment by Ian Wilmut and Keith Campbell. Her life lasted 6.5 years. In 2003, Dolly was euthanized and her stuffed animal is on display at the Royal Scottish Museum.

A boy with a grenade in his hand. The work of photographer Diane Arbus. Pictured is the son of tennis player Sidney Wood, Colin Wood. In his right hand the boy holds a toy grenade. It seems that the child is terribly scared, but in fact the photo did not work for a long time and the boy shouted in hysterics, “Take it already!” An unknown collector paid $408,000 for the photo in 2005.

An old man and a dog met after a tornado in the USA in March 2012.

A Sudan People's Liberation Army soldier at a rehearsal for the Independence Day parade. Powerful photo.

The sea is incomprehensible, mysterious and clean. It leaves no one indifferent... Breathtaking photographs by Josh Adamski

The sea is incomprehensible, mysterious and clean. It leaves no one indifferent... Breathtaking photographs by Josh Adamski

Josh Adamski is a famous British photographer, master of modern photography. He gained his fame thanks to the art of conceptual photography. Talented photographer Josh Adamski creates true masterpieces of photography, not only improving his work with digital processing, but also putting his soul into it, displaying the idea and meaning. Josh Adamski is of the opinion that there are no set rules for taking good photography, but that there are good photographers who take good photographs. And he considers his main motto to be Ansel Adams’ statement: “You don’t take a photograph, you make it,” which translated means: “You shouldn’t take a photograph, you should make a photograph.”

They say that the sea is endless. From a geographical point of view this is, of course, not true. However, if you look at it even for a moment, all doubts immediately disappear. The endless horizon is so vast, so distant.

I love walks by the sea. I never get tired of them, because they are always different. The sea itself is never the same. It is changeable in nature. Today it is calm and quiet and as if there is nothing more gentle than its light waves. The water reflects the warm rays of the sun and blinds eyes that are not accustomed to bright light. The warm sand pleasantly warms my feet, and my skin turns golden tan. And tomorrow the sea will be stirred up by a strong wind and majestic waves are already beating against the shore with the force of a huge beast. The blue sky will turn gray and stormy. And that calm happiness of the quiet sea is no longer there. However, this also has its own charm. This is the beauty of rawness and strength. Even the color of sea water often changes - sometimes it is almost blue, sometimes dark blue, sometimes greenish. It’s impossible to even list all its shades.

How much beauty lies in the depths of the sea. Small fish swim in schools among green and yellowish algae. And the sandy bottom is covered with shells, like precious stones. I love collecting shells. I like to imagine that I am finding lost treasures from sunken ships. How many such jewels are still hidden in the depths of the sea?

There is nothing better than spending a day at sea. You can have fun and swim with your family and friends. And sometimes you just want to take a walk alone, feel the peace while listening to the sound of the waves.

The sea is incomprehensible, mysterious and clean. It leaves no one indifferent.