Subscription

Stock Photo: The Shard pierces the horizon as a soaring needle of glass, standing as a dominant silhouette against the sky. Beside it, the gracefully curved News Building reflects the sun golden glow, its rhythmic

Item number : 138930039 See all

This Stock Photo, whose title is "The Shard pierces the horizon as a soaring..."[138930039], includes tags of modern building, skyscraper, turquoise. The author of this item is anutr (No.1354973). Sizes from S to XL are available and the price starts from US$5.00. You can download watermarked sample data (comp images), check the quality of images, and use Lightbox after signing up for free. See all

The Shard pierces the horizon as a soaring needle of glass, standing as a dominant silhouette against the sky. Beside it, the gracefully curved News Building reflects the sun golden glow, its rhythmic 138930039

The Shard pierces the horizon as a soaring needle of glass, standing as a dominant silhouette against the sky. Beside it, the gracefully curved News Building reflects the sun golden glow, its rhythmic

  • 1:1
  • 4:3
  • 4:5
    (8:10)
  • 3:2(6:4)
  • Custom
    :

Scale

* You can move the image by dragging it.

S
  • 440 x 640px
  • 15.5 x 22.6cm (72dpi)
JPG US$5.00
M
  • 1376 x 2000px
  • 11.7 x 16.9cm (300dpi)
JPG US$15.00
L
  • 2752 x 4000px
  • 23.3 x 33.9cm (300dpi)
JPG US$30.00
XL
  • 3948 x 5737px
  • 33.4 x 48.6cm (300dpi)
JPG US$50.00
Ex Add an Extended License +US$30.00
Total :
Design with this image

With this editor tool,
you can create a design with PIXTA items before purchasing.
Click here for details.

Stock Photo: The Shard pierces the horizon as a soaring needle of glass, standing as a dominant silhouette against the sky. Beside it, the gracefully curved News Building reflects the sun golden glow, its rhythmic tags

Description / Comment
The Shard, a soaring needle of glass and steel that pierces the pale blue horizon as Western Europe tallest silhouette. Beside its sharp, crystalline peak, the curved, rhythmic glass of The News Building often called the "Baby Shard" arcs gracefully