Find inspiration with pictures, tips and stories of Rome from travelers sharing their experiences
Book your trip to Rome and remunerate who inspired you
Travel guide of RomeI had been walking through Rome for a couple days looking for the right scene to capture the beautiful architecture in such an iconic city. This image really stuck out to me due to its simplicity, yet complexity of what I had been attempting to photograph. What I love about the image is the gradient created from the shadows near the streets which complement the apartments lit above.
Experienced by Jace & Afsoon
A photography from a trip to Rome. PLEASE CREDIT, when downloading :) - Urban Jyden Website - https://urbanjyden.bigcartel.com/ Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/urbanjyden
Experienced by Urban Jyden
Loneliness, depression, and sociability. If you walk around the streets in any city in the world - you’ll notice those old, tiny people. Probably slowly walking home with a stick or small bag. They wear old-fashioned, worn-out clothes, don’t have a phone and probably don’t have enough money to afford a better life. Most people are walking by them and think that they’ll never be the same when they become old. Probably they’ll say: “ehh I’m only 25, I have so much time until I become 83” But actually, they don’t.
Experienced by Oleksandr Kurchev
Evening stroll through Rome and came across this shot I was walking back from Vatican City
Experienced by Dylan Freedom
Street in Rome Italy with Parked Cars, Cobbled Street with overhead light.
Experienced by adison clark
me and my friend visited rome in our holidays for a day, and went to the most beautiful and historic buildings in rome.
Experienced by Lars
Ponte Vittoria Emanuelle II in it’s nightlighting is a beautiful bridge crossing the Tiber in Rome. I saw the bridge with St. Peter’s church in the background and just wanted to freeze the moment in time. The only way to capture the beaty it deserved was by taking an HDR image.
Experienced by Christian Nordmark
Rome is notable for the fact that almost every corner resembles footage from Wes Anderson movies. One thing I can say for sure: the Director was inspired here more than once.
Experienced by Ilnur Kalimullin
Between 2008 and 2009 I realized a photographic campaign on the artifacts of industrial archeology. Observing those spaces, I thought of the function that they had in the past in relation to the city, to their present state of emptiness, abandon, and ruin, and how a community can make them function and rethink their use. The project “Romantico Metropolitano” concentrates on some “unresolved” spaces, from an uncertain future, or better, from the future in which another conflict would generate, in fact, conflict places.
Experienced by ANTONIO IDINI
This iconic fountain in Rome is definitely worth the visit just be ready to wait in line to get a good photo past the crowds.
Experienced by Victor Hughes
Between 2008 and 2009 I realized a photographic campaign on the artifacts of industrial archeology. Observing those spaces, I thought of the function that they had in the past in relation to the city, to their present state of emptiness, abandon, and ruin, and how a community can make them function and rethink their use. The project “Romantico Metropolitano” concentrates on some “unresolved” spaces, from an uncertain future, or better, from the future in which another conflict would generate, in fact, conflict places.
Experienced by ANTONIO IDINI
The Mausoleum of Hadrian, usually known as Castel Sant’Angelo is a towering cylindrical building in Parco Adriano, Rome, Italy. It was initially commissioned by the Roman Emperor Hadrian as a mausoleum for himself and his family. The building was later used by the popes as a fortress and castle, and is now a museum. The structure was once the tallest building in Rome.
Experienced by Tatjana Djukic
A classic view of the Colosseum in Rome, one of the wonders of the world
Experienced by Ariel Pilotto
Panorama shot of the buildings that make the skyline of Rome, Italy during sunset, with the Colosseum in the middle.
Experienced by Cosmin Serban
500 years of architectural styles harmoniously combined in one Roman street
Experienced by Gabriella Clare Marino
A woman in black wearing shades, a face mask and protective gloves walks along a charming street in Rome, Italy
Experienced by Gabriella Clare Marino
Two women in face masks carrying shopping bags while another woman looks on from an antique window in Rome, Italy
Experienced by Gabriella Clare Marino
Where new meets old. During the pandemic of 2020 a street vendor of African decent walks along the side walk as a young European women passes by on an e-scooter. To me this captures our changing world so elegantly. A world full of uncertainty and promise. A world in which the internet has created a borderless society yet the under the guise of the pandemic nations are attempting to become isolationist. Ignoring the lessons of past civilizations and their empires from the Egyptians and Chinese, to the Romans and Ottomans, all of which turned inward as their collapse became imminent.
Experienced by Mark Harpur
A city built upon a city, civilizations but atop civilizations. Nothing is created in isolation, everything has a past from which it changed and grew. As we deal with the ramifications of the 2020 pandemic from economic collapse to the prospect a lost generation, one has to consider what will those of the future build out of the rubble that was our civilization?
Experienced by Mark Harpur
What do you miss? During the 2020 pandemic people cities and countries around the world allowed their rulers to take away basic freedoms such as a mother walking her daughter along a riverside to intimate social interactions. Later mandating face masks be worn outdoors to prevent the virus from spreading whilst ignoring the choking air pollution whose symptoms the virus exasperated.
Experienced by Mark Harpur