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benjamin_dennel

Benjamin Dennel

Art director
Creative @landorofficial
Adventurer @priiisme
Ex teacher @rafflesmilano
🏴‍☠️ Paris – Milan – Rome

155
posts
2K
followers
529
following

👁️
I’m delighted with what we achieved on this project and thankful for the opportunity to work alongside such a talented team.

Huge thanks to my amazing @landorofficial teammates: @akseloz, @aleks_vujatovic, @bapt_pch, @fredgranon, @remich666, @mthld.lnd, @ttianbai and @didierhge

Special thanks to Delphine Urbach for trusting us with this project, @lorealparis and @editions_gallimard

———
100,000 Years of Beauty Book

This project presents an iconic object exploring the history of beauty through art and culture. Conceived as a perfect cube symbolizing timelessness, it centers on the gaze—echoing the idea that “beauty lives in the eye that sees it.” The mirrored box invites both contemplation and self-reflection, while interchangeable covers offer a personalized experience. Inspired by five iconic gazes from across eras, it transcends cultural boundaries, showcasing the evolution of aesthetic ideals and inviting viewers to see themselves within the universal story of beauty.


38
2
8 months ago


The Global Commons Tapestry is exhibited in the Planetary Embassy of Voice of Commons at the Venice Architecture Biennale.

Designed by Giulia Foscari and realised by master weaver Giovanni Bonotto (Fondazione Bonotto), the tapestry features satellite images Courtesy of the European Space Agency (ESA), and was developed with graphic design support by Benjamin Dennel.

The Global Commons tapestry is not “just” an object. It is a manifesto. A planetary section woven in pixels.

In an era where the planetary crisis risks to outpace our capacity to imagine alternative futures, the tapestry renders visible what is often ignored: the precarious state of our Global Commons—Antarctica, the Ocean, the Atmosphere, and Outer Space—through the dispassionate yet omnipresent gaze of unmanned orbital satellites, at once a tool of knowledge and a mechanism of control.

The tapestry stitches together Holocene utopias with Anthropocene collapse: oil spills dispersing into oceanic currents, extreme weather systems tearing through landscapes, ice sheets fracturing into disappearance. These are not abstractions. They are planetary signals, data points in a system pushed beyond its boundaries.

Its composition is sectional—an Earth-to-universe cut—layering satellite imagery from the seabed to the stratosphere, from the frozen commons of Antarctica to the space debris drifting in orbit. The tapestry holds within it the paradox of technology: both the cause of our planetary predicament and the key to its comprehension. The same instruments that trace our trajectory towards tipping points also offer the knowledge to recalibrate.

Inscribed within its weave, critical thresholds mark the urgency of now: 15°C above pre-industrial temperatures, 424 ppm CO₂, rising ocean acidification. These are not numbers; they are planetary boundaries breached. The tapestry does not ask for passive viewing—it demands recognition. It is a call to action, a demand for accountability, an invitation to collectively reimagine the planetary contract before the fabric unravels.

@una_unless @giuliafoscariwr @UNESCO @UNoceandecade @europeanspaceagency @bonotto_official @fondazionebonotto @benjamin_dennel


42
1
11 months ago

The Global Commons Tapestry is exhibited in the Planetary Embassy of Voice of Commons at the Venice Architecture Biennale.

Designed by Giulia Foscari and realised by master weaver Giovanni Bonotto (Fondazione Bonotto), the tapestry features satellite images Courtesy of the European Space Agency (ESA), and was developed with graphic design support by Benjamin Dennel.

The Global Commons tapestry is not “just” an object. It is a manifesto. A planetary section woven in pixels.

In an era where the planetary crisis risks to outpace our capacity to imagine alternative futures, the tapestry renders visible what is often ignored: the precarious state of our Global Commons—Antarctica, the Ocean, the Atmosphere, and Outer Space—through the dispassionate yet omnipresent gaze of unmanned orbital satellites, at once a tool of knowledge and a mechanism of control.

The tapestry stitches together Holocene utopias with Anthropocene collapse: oil spills dispersing into oceanic currents, extreme weather systems tearing through landscapes, ice sheets fracturing into disappearance. These are not abstractions. They are planetary signals, data points in a system pushed beyond its boundaries.

Its composition is sectional—an Earth-to-universe cut—layering satellite imagery from the seabed to the stratosphere, from the frozen commons of Antarctica to the space debris drifting in orbit. The tapestry holds within it the paradox of technology: both the cause of our planetary predicament and the key to its comprehension. The same instruments that trace our trajectory towards tipping points also offer the knowledge to recalibrate.

Inscribed within its weave, critical thresholds mark the urgency of now: 15°C above pre-industrial temperatures, 424 ppm CO₂, rising ocean acidification. These are not numbers; they are planetary boundaries breached. The tapestry does not ask for passive viewing—it demands recognition. It is a call to action, a demand for accountability, an invitation to collectively reimagine the planetary contract before the fabric unravels.

@una_unless @giuliafoscariwr @UNESCO @UNoceandecade @europeanspaceagency @bonotto_official @fondazionebonotto @benjamin_dennel


42
1
11 months ago

The Global Commons Tapestry is exhibited in the Planetary Embassy of Voice of Commons at the Venice Architecture Biennale.

Designed by Giulia Foscari and realised by master weaver Giovanni Bonotto (Fondazione Bonotto), the tapestry features satellite images Courtesy of the European Space Agency (ESA), and was developed with graphic design support by Benjamin Dennel.

The Global Commons tapestry is not “just” an object. It is a manifesto. A planetary section woven in pixels.

In an era where the planetary crisis risks to outpace our capacity to imagine alternative futures, the tapestry renders visible what is often ignored: the precarious state of our Global Commons—Antarctica, the Ocean, the Atmosphere, and Outer Space—through the dispassionate yet omnipresent gaze of unmanned orbital satellites, at once a tool of knowledge and a mechanism of control.

The tapestry stitches together Holocene utopias with Anthropocene collapse: oil spills dispersing into oceanic currents, extreme weather systems tearing through landscapes, ice sheets fracturing into disappearance. These are not abstractions. They are planetary signals, data points in a system pushed beyond its boundaries.

Its composition is sectional—an Earth-to-universe cut—layering satellite imagery from the seabed to the stratosphere, from the frozen commons of Antarctica to the space debris drifting in orbit. The tapestry holds within it the paradox of technology: both the cause of our planetary predicament and the key to its comprehension. The same instruments that trace our trajectory towards tipping points also offer the knowledge to recalibrate.

Inscribed within its weave, critical thresholds mark the urgency of now: 15°C above pre-industrial temperatures, 424 ppm CO₂, rising ocean acidification. These are not numbers; they are planetary boundaries breached. The tapestry does not ask for passive viewing—it demands recognition. It is a call to action, a demand for accountability, an invitation to collectively reimagine the planetary contract before the fabric unravels.

@una_unless @giuliafoscariwr @UNESCO @UNoceandecade @europeanspaceagency @bonotto_official @fondazionebonotto @benjamin_dennel


42
1
11 months ago

The Global Commons Tapestry is exhibited in the Planetary Embassy of Voice of Commons at the Venice Architecture Biennale.

Designed by Giulia Foscari and realised by master weaver Giovanni Bonotto (Fondazione Bonotto), the tapestry features satellite images Courtesy of the European Space Agency (ESA), and was developed with graphic design support by Benjamin Dennel.

The Global Commons tapestry is not “just” an object. It is a manifesto. A planetary section woven in pixels.

In an era where the planetary crisis risks to outpace our capacity to imagine alternative futures, the tapestry renders visible what is often ignored: the precarious state of our Global Commons—Antarctica, the Ocean, the Atmosphere, and Outer Space—through the dispassionate yet omnipresent gaze of unmanned orbital satellites, at once a tool of knowledge and a mechanism of control.

The tapestry stitches together Holocene utopias with Anthropocene collapse: oil spills dispersing into oceanic currents, extreme weather systems tearing through landscapes, ice sheets fracturing into disappearance. These are not abstractions. They are planetary signals, data points in a system pushed beyond its boundaries.

Its composition is sectional—an Earth-to-universe cut—layering satellite imagery from the seabed to the stratosphere, from the frozen commons of Antarctica to the space debris drifting in orbit. The tapestry holds within it the paradox of technology: both the cause of our planetary predicament and the key to its comprehension. The same instruments that trace our trajectory towards tipping points also offer the knowledge to recalibrate.

Inscribed within its weave, critical thresholds mark the urgency of now: 15°C above pre-industrial temperatures, 424 ppm CO₂, rising ocean acidification. These are not numbers; they are planetary boundaries breached. The tapestry does not ask for passive viewing—it demands recognition. It is a call to action, a demand for accountability, an invitation to collectively reimagine the planetary contract before the fabric unravels.

@una_unless @giuliafoscariwr @UNESCO @UNoceandecade @europeanspaceagency @bonotto_official @fondazionebonotto @benjamin_dennel


25
11 months ago

The Global Commons Tapestry is exhibited in the Planetary Embassy of Voice of Commons at the Venice Architecture Biennale.

Designed by Giulia Foscari and realised by master weaver Giovanni Bonotto (Fondazione Bonotto), the tapestry features satellite images Courtesy of the European Space Agency (ESA), and was developed with graphic design support by Benjamin Dennel.

The Global Commons tapestry is not “just” an object. It is a manifesto. A planetary section woven in pixels.

In an era where the planetary crisis risks to outpace our capacity to imagine alternative futures, the tapestry renders visible what is often ignored: the precarious state of our Global Commons—Antarctica, the Ocean, the Atmosphere, and Outer Space—through the dispassionate yet omnipresent gaze of unmanned orbital satellites, at once a tool of knowledge and a mechanism of control.

The tapestry stitches together Holocene utopias with Anthropocene collapse: oil spills dispersing into oceanic currents, extreme weather systems tearing through landscapes, ice sheets fracturing into disappearance. These are not abstractions. They are planetary signals, data points in a system pushed beyond its boundaries.

Its composition is sectional—an Earth-to-universe cut—layering satellite imagery from the seabed to the stratosphere, from the frozen commons of Antarctica to the space debris drifting in orbit. The tapestry holds within it the paradox of technology: both the cause of our planetary predicament and the key to its comprehension. The same instruments that trace our trajectory towards tipping points also offer the knowledge to recalibrate.

Inscribed within its weave, critical thresholds mark the urgency of now: 15°C above pre-industrial temperatures, 424 ppm CO₂, rising ocean acidification. These are not numbers; they are planetary boundaries breached. The tapestry does not ask for passive viewing—it demands recognition. It is a call to action, a demand for accountability, an invitation to collectively reimagine the planetary contract before the fabric unravels.

@una_unless @giuliafoscariwr @UNESCO @UNoceandecade @europeanspaceagency @bonotto_official @fondazionebonotto @benjamin_dennel


25
11 months ago

The Global Commons Tapestry is exhibited in the Planetary Embassy of Voice of Commons at the Venice Architecture Biennale.

Designed by Giulia Foscari and realised by master weaver Giovanni Bonotto (Fondazione Bonotto), the tapestry features satellite images Courtesy of the European Space Agency (ESA), and was developed with graphic design support by Benjamin Dennel.

The Global Commons tapestry is not “just” an object. It is a manifesto. A planetary section woven in pixels.

In an era where the planetary crisis risks to outpace our capacity to imagine alternative futures, the tapestry renders visible what is often ignored: the precarious state of our Global Commons—Antarctica, the Ocean, the Atmosphere, and Outer Space—through the dispassionate yet omnipresent gaze of unmanned orbital satellites, at once a tool of knowledge and a mechanism of control.

The tapestry stitches together Holocene utopias with Anthropocene collapse: oil spills dispersing into oceanic currents, extreme weather systems tearing through landscapes, ice sheets fracturing into disappearance. These are not abstractions. They are planetary signals, data points in a system pushed beyond its boundaries.

Its composition is sectional—an Earth-to-universe cut—layering satellite imagery from the seabed to the stratosphere, from the frozen commons of Antarctica to the space debris drifting in orbit. The tapestry holds within it the paradox of technology: both the cause of our planetary predicament and the key to its comprehension. The same instruments that trace our trajectory towards tipping points also offer the knowledge to recalibrate.

Inscribed within its weave, critical thresholds mark the urgency of now: 15°C above pre-industrial temperatures, 424 ppm CO₂, rising ocean acidification. These are not numbers; they are planetary boundaries breached. The tapestry does not ask for passive viewing—it demands recognition. It is a call to action, a demand for accountability, an invitation to collectively reimagine the planetary contract before the fabric unravels.

@una_unless @giuliafoscariwr @UNESCO @UNoceandecade @europeanspaceagency @bonotto_official @fondazionebonotto @benjamin_dennel


25
11 months ago

The Global Commons Tapestry is exhibited in the Planetary Embassy of Voice of Commons at the Venice Architecture Biennale.

Designed by Giulia Foscari and realised by master weaver Giovanni Bonotto (Fondazione Bonotto), the tapestry features satellite images Courtesy of the European Space Agency (ESA), and was developed with graphic design support by Benjamin Dennel.

The Global Commons tapestry is not “just” an object. It is a manifesto. A planetary section woven in pixels.

In an era where the planetary crisis risks to outpace our capacity to imagine alternative futures, the tapestry renders visible what is often ignored: the precarious state of our Global Commons—Antarctica, the Ocean, the Atmosphere, and Outer Space—through the dispassionate yet omnipresent gaze of unmanned orbital satellites, at once a tool of knowledge and a mechanism of control.

The tapestry stitches together Holocene utopias with Anthropocene collapse: oil spills dispersing into oceanic currents, extreme weather systems tearing through landscapes, ice sheets fracturing into disappearance. These are not abstractions. They are planetary signals, data points in a system pushed beyond its boundaries.

Its composition is sectional—an Earth-to-universe cut—layering satellite imagery from the seabed to the stratosphere, from the frozen commons of Antarctica to the space debris drifting in orbit. The tapestry holds within it the paradox of technology: both the cause of our planetary predicament and the key to its comprehension. The same instruments that trace our trajectory towards tipping points also offer the knowledge to recalibrate.

Inscribed within its weave, critical thresholds mark the urgency of now: 15°C above pre-industrial temperatures, 424 ppm CO₂, rising ocean acidification. These are not numbers; they are planetary boundaries breached. The tapestry does not ask for passive viewing—it demands recognition. It is a call to action, a demand for accountability, an invitation to collectively reimagine the planetary contract before the fabric unravels.

@una_unless @giuliafoscariwr @UNESCO @UNoceandecade @europeanspaceagency @bonotto_official @fondazionebonotto @benjamin_dennel


25
11 months ago


The Global Commons Tapestry is exhibited in the Planetary Embassy of Voice of Commons at the Venice Architecture Biennale.

Designed by Giulia Foscari and realised by master weaver Giovanni Bonotto (Fondazione Bonotto), the tapestry features satellite images Courtesy of the European Space Agency (ESA), and was developed with graphic design support by Benjamin Dennel.

The Global Commons tapestry is not “just” an object. It is a manifesto. A planetary section woven in pixels.

In an era where the planetary crisis risks to outpace our capacity to imagine alternative futures, the tapestry renders visible what is often ignored: the precarious state of our Global Commons—Antarctica, the Ocean, the Atmosphere, and Outer Space—through the dispassionate yet omnipresent gaze of unmanned orbital satellites, at once a tool of knowledge and a mechanism of control.

The tapestry stitches together Holocene utopias with Anthropocene collapse: oil spills dispersing into oceanic currents, extreme weather systems tearing through landscapes, ice sheets fracturing into disappearance. These are not abstractions. They are planetary signals, data points in a system pushed beyond its boundaries.

Its composition is sectional—an Earth-to-universe cut—layering satellite imagery from the seabed to the stratosphere, from the frozen commons of Antarctica to the space debris drifting in orbit. The tapestry holds within it the paradox of technology: both the cause of our planetary predicament and the key to its comprehension. The same instruments that trace our trajectory towards tipping points also offer the knowledge to recalibrate.

Inscribed within its weave, critical thresholds mark the urgency of now: 15°C above pre-industrial temperatures, 424 ppm CO₂, rising ocean acidification. These are not numbers; they are planetary boundaries breached. The tapestry does not ask for passive viewing—it demands recognition. It is a call to action, a demand for accountability, an invitation to collectively reimagine the planetary contract before the fabric unravels.

@una_unless @giuliafoscariwr @UNESCO @UNoceandecade @europeanspaceagency @bonotto_official @fondazionebonotto @benjamin_dennel


25
11 months ago

The Global Commons Tapestry is exhibited in the Planetary Embassy of Voice of Commons at the Venice Architecture Biennale.

Designed by Giulia Foscari and realised by master weaver Giovanni Bonotto (Fondazione Bonotto), the tapestry features satellite images Courtesy of the European Space Agency (ESA), and was developed with graphic design support by Benjamin Dennel.

The Global Commons tapestry is not “just” an object. It is a manifesto. A planetary section woven in pixels.

In an era where the planetary crisis risks to outpace our capacity to imagine alternative futures, the tapestry renders visible what is often ignored: the precarious state of our Global Commons—Antarctica, the Ocean, the Atmosphere, and Outer Space—through the dispassionate yet omnipresent gaze of unmanned orbital satellites, at once a tool of knowledge and a mechanism of control.

The tapestry stitches together Holocene utopias with Anthropocene collapse: oil spills dispersing into oceanic currents, extreme weather systems tearing through landscapes, ice sheets fracturing into disappearance. These are not abstractions. They are planetary signals, data points in a system pushed beyond its boundaries.

Its composition is sectional—an Earth-to-universe cut—layering satellite imagery from the seabed to the stratosphere, from the frozen commons of Antarctica to the space debris drifting in orbit. The tapestry holds within it the paradox of technology: both the cause of our planetary predicament and the key to its comprehension. The same instruments that trace our trajectory towards tipping points also offer the knowledge to recalibrate.

Inscribed within its weave, critical thresholds mark the urgency of now: 15°C above pre-industrial temperatures, 424 ppm CO₂, rising ocean acidification. These are not numbers; they are planetary boundaries breached. The tapestry does not ask for passive viewing—it demands recognition. It is a call to action, a demand for accountability, an invitation to collectively reimagine the planetary contract before the fabric unravels.

@una_unless @giuliafoscariwr @UNESCO @UNoceandecade @europeanspaceagency @bonotto_official @fondazionebonotto @benjamin_dennel


25
11 months ago

The Global Commons Tapestry is exhibited in the Planetary Embassy of Voice of Commons at the Venice Architecture Biennale.

Designed by Giulia Foscari and realised by master weaver Giovanni Bonotto (Fondazione Bonotto), the tapestry features satellite images Courtesy of the European Space Agency (ESA), and was developed with graphic design support by Benjamin Dennel.

The Global Commons tapestry is not “just” an object. It is a manifesto. A planetary section woven in pixels.

In an era where the planetary crisis risks to outpace our capacity to imagine alternative futures, the tapestry renders visible what is often ignored: the precarious state of our Global Commons—Antarctica, the Ocean, the Atmosphere, and Outer Space—through the dispassionate yet omnipresent gaze of unmanned orbital satellites, at once a tool of knowledge and a mechanism of control.

The tapestry stitches together Holocene utopias with Anthropocene collapse: oil spills dispersing into oceanic currents, extreme weather systems tearing through landscapes, ice sheets fracturing into disappearance. These are not abstractions. They are planetary signals, data points in a system pushed beyond its boundaries.

Its composition is sectional—an Earth-to-universe cut—layering satellite imagery from the seabed to the stratosphere, from the frozen commons of Antarctica to the space debris drifting in orbit. The tapestry holds within it the paradox of technology: both the cause of our planetary predicament and the key to its comprehension. The same instruments that trace our trajectory towards tipping points also offer the knowledge to recalibrate.

Inscribed within its weave, critical thresholds mark the urgency of now: 15°C above pre-industrial temperatures, 424 ppm CO₂, rising ocean acidification. These are not numbers; they are planetary boundaries breached. The tapestry does not ask for passive viewing—it demands recognition. It is a call to action, a demand for accountability, an invitation to collectively reimagine the planetary contract before the fabric unravels.

@una_unless @giuliafoscariwr @UNESCO @UNoceandecade @europeanspaceagency @bonotto_official @fondazionebonotto @benjamin_dennel


25
11 months ago

14
1
1 years ago

15
2
1 years ago

11
1 years ago

9
1 years ago


9
1 years ago

8
1 years ago

In the air


33
1
1 years ago

Beijing


30
1 years ago

Beijing


16
1 years ago


Instagram Stories geheim ansehen

Der Instagram Story Viewer ist ein einfaches Tool, mit dem Sie Instagram Stories, Videos, Fotos oder IGTV heimlich ansehen und speichern können. Mit diesem Service können Sie Inhalte herunterladen und offline genießen, wann immer Sie möchten. Wenn Sie etwas Interessantes auf Instagram finden, das Sie später überprüfen möchten, oder Stories anonym ansehen möchten, ist unser Viewer ideal für Sie. Anonstories bietet eine ausgezeichnete Lösung, um Ihre Identität zu schützen. Instagram hat die Stories-Funktion erstmals im August 2023 eingeführt, die schnell auch von anderen Plattformen übernommen wurde, dank ihres fesselnden, zeitlich begrenzten Formats. Stories ermöglichen es Nutzern, schnelle Updates zu teilen, sei es Fotos, Videos oder Selfies, ergänzt durch Text, Emojis oder Filter, und sind nur 24 Stunden lang sichtbar. Dieser begrenzte Zeitrahmen sorgt für eine hohe Interaktion im Vergleich zu regulären Posts. Heutzutage sind Stories eine der beliebtesten Methoden, um sich in sozialen Medien zu verbinden und zu kommunizieren. Wenn Sie jedoch eine Story ansehen, kann der Ersteller Ihren Namen in seiner Viewer-Liste sehen, was ein Problem für die Privatsphäre sein kann. Was ist, wenn Sie Stories durchsuchen möchten, ohne bemerkt zu werden? Hier wird Anonstories nützlich. Es ermöglicht Ihnen, öffentliche Instagram-Inhalte anzusehen, ohne Ihre Identität preiszugeben. Geben Sie einfach den Benutzernamen des Profils ein, das Sie interessiert, und das Tool zeigt dessen neueste Stories an. Funktionen des Anonstories Viewers: - Anonymes Browsen: Sehen Sie Stories, ohne in der Viewer-Liste zu erscheinen. - Kein Konto erforderlich: Sehen Sie öffentliche Inhalte, ohne ein Instagram-Konto zu erstellen. - Inhalte herunterladen: Speichern Sie beliebige Story-Inhalte direkt auf Ihrem Gerät für die Offline-Nutzung. - Highlights anzeigen: Greifen Sie auf Instagram-Highlights zu, auch über das 24-Stunden-Fenster hinaus. - Repost-Überwachung: Verfolgen Sie Reposts oder Interaktionen bei Stories für persönliche Profile. Einschränkungen: - Dieses Tool funktioniert nur mit öffentlichen Accounts; private Accounts bleiben unzugänglich. Vorteile: - Datenschutzfreundlich: Sehen Sie sich beliebige Instagram-Inhalte an, ohne bemerkt zu werden. - Einfach und unkompliziert: Keine App-Installation oder Registrierung erforderlich. - Exklusive Tools: Laden Sie Inhalte herunter und verwalten Sie sie auf eine Weise, die Instagram nicht bietet.

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Behalten Sie Instagram-Updates diskret im Blick, schützen Sie Ihre Privatsphäre und bleiben Sie anonym.


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Kostenloser Story Viewer

Dieses kostenlose Tool ermöglicht es Ihnen, Instagram Stories anonym anzusehen und dabei Ihre Aktivität vor dem Story-Ersteller zu verbergen.

Häufig gestellte Fragen

 
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Anonstories ermöglicht es Nutzern, Instagram-Stories anzusehen, ohne den Ersteller zu benachrichtigen.

 
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Funktioniert nahtlos auf iOS, Android, Windows, macOS und modernen Browsern wie Chrome und Safari.

 
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Priorisiert sicheres, anonymes Browsen, ohne Login-Daten zu benötigen.

 
Keine Registrierung

Nutzer können öffentliche Stories ansehen, indem sie einfach einen Benutzernamen eingeben – kein Konto erforderlich.

 
Unterstützte Formate

Lädt Fotos (JPEG) und Videos (MP4) mühelos herunter.

 
Kosten

Der Dienst ist kostenlos nutzbar.

 
Private Accounts

Inhalte von privaten Accounts sind nur für Follower zugänglich.

 
Dateiverwendung

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Wie es funktioniert

Geben Sie einen öffentlichen Benutzernamen ein, um Stories anzusehen oder herunterzuladen. Der Dienst generiert direkte Links, um Inhalte lokal zu speichern.