

Hello fellow Clickstars!
Across this edition, we move from misty European alleys and American skylines to the layered urban fabric of Indian cities – a small but powerful reminder that trusted images can connect cultures without filters, edits, or algorithms getting in the way. So settle in, and let this week’s Clicks of the Week guide you through streets, skylines, and stories that are now preserved – quite literally – in the blocks beneath your feet.
Throughout the week, the team handpicks Clicks to promote the different feeds and Clickstars on social media, like X, Instagram and Hey.xyz or orb.club. They get a tip from Nodle for their contributions to the network, Click archive and creativity - if you want to get highlighted by the official accounts, keep on Clicking, yours might be next!
Link your Click app profile to your Nodle app by using the same seedphrase in both apps, set up a username, and claim your clk.eth or nodl.eth handle - this makes it easier to get in touch with your fans and also to receive tips!
Support the network and its creators by following the official accounts, sharing, liking and commenting on the posts. Your support is crucial to the network's success!

In this week, the archive grew by 216 Clicks, totaling a staggering 70,854 certified media that got put on the chain. Week by week, contributions all over the world contribute to Nodle - the first Digital Trust Network that empowers creators and enterprises alike through their Android and iOS apps.
Monday, February 2, 2026
Where: Locmaria-Plouzané, Finistère, France
Feed: Nature

Certified image
https://clickapp.com/zk/cid/QmRuGdbDEsbwhJKSA7cdqSPrnikpe6mk5mGWzCF3523V1t
Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2018418025159069719
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/clickdeepreals/p/DURL7pTjpbW/
Hey: https://hey.xyz/posts/38791v6062bhqma1csx
In this week’s opening Click, we drift back to France and into a quieter register with a Click that feels like an unhurried exhale. A single tree, a path, and a stretch of sky are all it takes – the kind of simple composition that immediately recalls the coastal calm of places like Gujan-Mestras along the Arcachon Bay, where winter sunlight can still feel surprisingly gentle.
The path in the image curves just enough to disappear from view, inviting that universal travel urge to “see what’s around the bend,” while the surrounding greenery hints at the soft Atlantic climate that allows palms and pines to coexist. Even without seeing the water, you can almost sense it nearby – perhaps just beyond the next line of trees, where oyster huts and wooden jetties would start dotting the shoreline.
It is the sort of Click you might take on a solo walk taken “just to get some air,” with no particular destination in mind, and later realize that this quiet, anonymous stretch of path has become one of your strongest memories of the trip. In a feed filled with spectacular sunsets and dramatic architecture, this small, contemplative moment stands out precisely because it looks like something you could step into on any given afternoon.
Coastal communities around the Arcachon Bay have spent decades weaving an intricate network of cycle and walking paths that connect pine forests, ports, and beaches into one continuous outdoor living room. In towns such as Gujan-Mestras, narrow lanes once used primarily by oyster farmers and foresters have been adapted for leisure, allowing cyclists and walkers to slip quietly between working harbors and residential neighborhoods without ever needing a car.
This path culture is deeply tied to the region’s oyster identity: many routes are designed to end (or conveniently pass) near tasting huts where you can sit at simple wooden tables, sample freshly opened oysters, and watch the tide reveal or conceal the sandbanks out in the bay. Because the water level changes so dramatically between high and low tide, the same viewpoint can feel like an entirely different landscape within a few hours – muddy grids of oyster beds at one moment, a glassy expanse of reflected sky the next. For locals, these paths aren’t just recreation; they are the connective tissue between work, family traditions, and an everyday intimacy with one of France’s most quietly distinctive coastal environments.
Thank you, KRISG1711 for sharing this marvelous Click!
Tuesday, February 3, 2026
Where: Fresno, California, United States
Feed: Architecture

Certified image
https://clickapp.com/zk/cid/QmYbfYX8keSyYJE3qQxGXXf117FMngPH9tTYrQmrqVbytn
Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2018799188557930812
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DUT5DrvDpbE
Hey: https://hey.xyz/posts/36rv8e41665gxys8qzf
From the glow of France's coasts we step into another Click from the United States that tilts the camera upward and lets the buildings speak for themselves, echoing Winston Churchill’s famous line: “We shape our buildings; thereafter they shape us.” The composition is classic urban minimalism – a strong vertical of glass and concrete rising into a pale sky, the edges so clean that the tower almost reads like a drawing traced against the light.
By keeping the street level out of frame, the Click invites you to imagine the life happening below: commuters weaving between crosswalks, coffee balanced in one hand and phone in the other, and the quiet ritual of office lights flicking on floor by floor as the day begins. In the reflections, hints of neighboring facades and sky streaks turn the building into a mirror of its own city, a reminder that every skyline is really a cluster of overlapping stories rather than just a set of coordinates on a map.
The photograph also captures something subtle about contemporary American downtowns: the shift from ornate stone to glassy efficiency, from carved cornices to green-tinted curtain walls designed as much for climate control as for aesthetics. Standing at the base of such a tower, your sense of scale is re-calibrated – the grid of windows becomes a kind of vertical calendar of lives, with each rectangle hinting at desks, plants, and late-night screens that never make it into the tourist brochures.
Skyscrapers like the one, captured by our local Clickstar, are not just feats of engineering; they’re social machines that quietly dictate daily rhythms. Elevator banks and lobby security lines create shared pauses where strangers briefly synchronize their day, while open-plan floors and glass-walled meeting rooms redefine what feels “private” at work.
In many American cities, zoning rules in the late 20th century pushed this kind of vertical density into tight downtown cores, which in turn shaped transport networks: light-rail lines, bus corridors, and pedestrian bridges were all oriented around getting people in and out of these tall clusters efficiently. At the same time, the reflective skins of newer towers are calibrated to manage heat and light loads, turning architecture into a quiet partner in the city’s energy footprint. Over years, the presence of these towers shifts where cafés open, where food trucks idle at lunch, and even where street musicians choose to perform – all small, human-scale echoes of decisions once made on drafting tables dozens of floors above street level.
Wednesday, February 4, 2026
Where: 東京都, Tokyo Prefecture, Japan
Feed: Food

Certified image https://clickapp.com/zk/cid/QmakRsrLFdKmVmNANKW7frxQAqN5yehvKqhfo5kiR7bT9Y
Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2019150556346851339
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/clickdeepreals/p/DUWZM5vjjJw/
Hey: https://hey.xyz/posts/hq1khxpphhnzh8n4pg
Midweek, our journey detours into the comforting universe of food with a Click that pairs a beautifully plated Japanese meal with M.F.K. Fisher’s gentle reminder: “First we eat, then we do everything else.” The photo itself is all about composition – lacquered trays, small ceramic dishes, and meticulous portions that transform the table into a grid of flavor and color.
There’s a quiet theater to this arrangement: the contrast between glossy miso soup, the matte surface of rice, and the glint of a small metal chopstick rest, each element carefully placed to guide the diner’s eye and appetite. Even without smelling the broth or hearing the clink of porcelain, you can feel the moment right before the first bite, when conversation pauses and everyone takes a heartbeat to simply appreciate what’s in front of them.
In a world flooded with exaggerated, algorithm-chasing food photos, this Click feels almost meditative – no heavy filters, no forced close-ups, just honest light falling on an everyday meal that many locals might take for granted but that now lives permanently on-chain as a tiny archive of daily life in Japan.
The structure of the meal in this Click hints at the classic ichiju-sansai style – “one soup, three dishes” – a template that has shaped home cooking and traditional set meals in Japan for centuries. The idea is less about strict rules and more about balance: a bowl of rice as anchor, miso soup for warmth, then a trio of side dishes that together weave protein, vegetables, and pickles into a complete nutritional story.
This approach emerged from a mix of Buddhist influences, seasonal agriculture, and historical scarcity, teaching households to stretch ingredients creatively while still honoring the aesthetics of the table. Over time, that sense of balance evolved into an everyday philosophy: meals should harmonize color (greens, whites, reds), cooking methods (raw, grilled, simmered), and flavors (sweet, salty, sour, bitter, umami) rather than rely on portion size alone. In modern cities, busy office workers might grab a convenience-store bento that still echoes this logic – a humble, plastic-box descendant of a very old way of thinking about how food supports both body and mind
We extend our heartfelt gratitude to our local Clickstar!
Thursday, January 29, 2026
Where: Louisville, Kentucky, United States
Feed: General

Certified image
https://clickapp.com/zk/cid/QmTHVmjcjtrCLN5PHwu1FCHdEp19cjeVRg1hxD4erHuUKi
Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2019521787390984544
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DUZCCdwAE4e
Hey: https://hey.xyz/posts/3ze39e5j2k4ptbqxqa0
Downtown Louisville, captured by our local Clickstar, at blue hour has a way of feeling both quietly local and unmistakably cinematic, and this week’s Click leans into that duality with style. The photographer frames a corridor of city light that draws your eye straight toward Fourth Street Live!, the covered entertainment district that slices through the historic core like a neon artery.
Under the translucent canopy of Fourth Street, the glow of signs and LED panels bounces off the glass and brick facades, turning a winter evening into a warm-toned urban amphitheater for date nights, after-work meetups, and visiting basketball fans on game weekends. The Click freezes that moment of transition when office towers are turning dark one window at a time, while the nightlife below is just powering up – a perfect snapshot of how American downtowns are learning to be both workplace and playground in the same narrow blocks.
You can almost hear the ambient soundtrack: a mix of live music from one of the bars inside the complex, the distant hum of traffic on the nearby I‑64, and the murmured conversations of people walking in under the bright canopy to escape the cold. In that sense, this image does what Louisville itself does so well – it blends the comfort of a mid‑South river town with the aspirational glow of a city that likes to punch above its cultural weight.
Fourth Street Live! sits on a street that has been central to Louisville’s story since the late 19th century, when these same blocks were lined with ornate department stores and grand hotels serving riverboat travelers and rail passengers headed west. Many of the surrounding buildings still carry that early-20th-century DNA in their brickwork and cornices, even as the interiors have been reimagined for restaurants, offices, and event spaces.
The modern entertainment complex reshaped this historic corridor in the early 2000s by adding its signature glass-and-steel roof, creating a weather-protected spine of nightlife that can function almost like an indoor street during Kentucky’s hot summers and chilly winters. Because the project sits only a short walk from the KFC Yum! Center, it has become an unofficial extension of the arena concourse on game nights, pulsing with basketball jerseys, visiting fans, and post-concert crowds. For locals, the area is also woven into personal lore – countless first dates, graduation dinners, and birthday parties have started or ended beneath that canopy, layering a lot of small private memories onto one very public strip of lights.
Friday, February 6, 2026
Where: Pimpri-Chinchwad, Maharashtra, India
Feed: Monuments

Certified image https://clickapp.com/zk/cid/QmQDXq3cLZezJKzg3eR9Z4MkP5rbt7rX3a8FCbCZJdxhup
Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2019891678232842431
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/clickdeepreals/p/DUbqNAEAAOR/
Hey: https://hey.xyz/posts/3m4phwvbmq7gw5wng9y
Back on the subcontinent, this week’s Click by HARSHARYAN captures a slice of everyday life that sits somewhere between motion and pause – the kind of scene you might pass a hundred times on your commute and only truly see when you raise a camera. The frame is dense with small details: layered signboards, a tangle of cables like urban vines, and the faint blur of a passing scooter that signals the constant hum of the street.
What makes the image sing is the light – a soft, late-afternoon warmth that pulls color out of painted shopfronts and worn concrete, turning what might otherwise be dismissed as “clutter” into a complex, living collage. There’s an honesty here that resonates with Click’s mission: instead of smoothing the scene into a sterile postcard, the photographer lets the city breathe in all its slightly chaotic charm.
If you linger over the Click, you start noticing micro-stories: the faint reflection of someone waiting at a chai stall, a stack of crates hinting at a nearby market, or a faded film poster half-peeling from a wall. These are the small visual anchors that make a neighborhood feel like home – details that rarely make it into tourism campaigns but mean everything to the people who navigate them daily.
Indian streetscapes like this often grow organically rather than from a formal master plan, and that improvisation creates a visual language all its own. Shop signs are layered as businesses change hands, producing palimpsests of typography where old paint never fully disappears under the new.
Because space is precious, façades double as storage, display, and social space: stacked crates and hanging wares effectively extend the shop out onto the pavement, while narrow ledges and doorsteps become mini seating areas where neighbors trade news. Electric and telecom cables, rather than being buried, remain visible overhead, tracing the history of each new connection like literal lines of communication crossing the sky. Urbanists sometimes call this “informal urbanism,” but for many locals it is simply how the city works – a hyper-efficient use of every available surface, guided more by relationships and opportunity than by diagrams and zoning codes.
This concludes this first February edition of Clicks of the Week!
This edition celebrates 216 new Clicks added to the archive, enriching the global map with fresh moments from France, the USA, Japan and India. Every time you open the Click Camera app and sign a photo into the Digital Trust Network, you’re not just posting – you’re preserving a real moment with verifiable context on-chain, helping to push back against the rising tide of synthetic and misleading imagery.
Want to see your corner of the world featured next? Just keep on Clicking, link your seedphrase to your Nodle app using the same seed phrase, and sign your favorite photos into the network – the next stop on this global journey might be yours.
Now, go relax and enjoy your weekend!
And please, help us spread the word about Click. Encourage your friends and family to submit their Clicks too - it's becoming the top destination for the best, most reliable media. Every contribution helps us improve our collection and gets great content seen by more people.
Before we forget!

Did you know that you can submit your favourite photos to ClickAI? It will provide feedback on how you can improve your next shots. Simply log into www.clickapp.com with your Click camera via WalletConnect, select your image, and click on AI✨ below your image.
With the latest update of the Nodle app, you can submit your favourite Clicks to the AI agent in the apps chat interface. Less friction, more opportunities!
You can then submit it to the AI contest for an entry fee, with the chance to win big if the AI's evaluation is favourable! Curious? Try it out today!
Did this catch your attention? Explore our blog post, Click: Beyond the Filter, to discover how the app powers the ecosystem behind the Digital Trust Network.
Happy Clicking, we can't wait to see what you share!
Hello fellow Clickstars!
Across this edition, we move from misty European alleys and American skylines to the layered urban fabric of Indian cities – a small but powerful reminder that trusted images can connect cultures without filters, edits, or algorithms getting in the way. So settle in, and let this week’s Clicks of the Week guide you through streets, skylines, and stories that are now preserved – quite literally – in the blocks beneath your feet.
Throughout the week, the team handpicks Clicks to promote the different feeds and Clickstars on social media, like X, Instagram and Hey.xyz or orb.club. They get a tip from Nodle for their contributions to the network, Click archive and creativity - if you want to get highlighted by the official accounts, keep on Clicking, yours might be next!
Link your Click app profile to your Nodle app by using the same seedphrase in both apps, set up a username, and claim your clk.eth or nodl.eth handle - this makes it easier to get in touch with your fans and also to receive tips!
Support the network and its creators by following the official accounts, sharing, liking and commenting on the posts. Your support is crucial to the network's success!

In this week, the archive grew by 216 Clicks, totaling a staggering 70,854 certified media that got put on the chain. Week by week, contributions all over the world contribute to Nodle - the first Digital Trust Network that empowers creators and enterprises alike through their Android and iOS apps.
Monday, February 2, 2026
Where: Locmaria-Plouzané, Finistère, France
Feed: Nature

Certified image
https://clickapp.com/zk/cid/QmRuGdbDEsbwhJKSA7cdqSPrnikpe6mk5mGWzCF3523V1t
Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2018418025159069719
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/clickdeepreals/p/DURL7pTjpbW/
Hey: https://hey.xyz/posts/38791v6062bhqma1csx
In this week’s opening Click, we drift back to France and into a quieter register with a Click that feels like an unhurried exhale. A single tree, a path, and a stretch of sky are all it takes – the kind of simple composition that immediately recalls the coastal calm of places like Gujan-Mestras along the Arcachon Bay, where winter sunlight can still feel surprisingly gentle.
The path in the image curves just enough to disappear from view, inviting that universal travel urge to “see what’s around the bend,” while the surrounding greenery hints at the soft Atlantic climate that allows palms and pines to coexist. Even without seeing the water, you can almost sense it nearby – perhaps just beyond the next line of trees, where oyster huts and wooden jetties would start dotting the shoreline.
It is the sort of Click you might take on a solo walk taken “just to get some air,” with no particular destination in mind, and later realize that this quiet, anonymous stretch of path has become one of your strongest memories of the trip. In a feed filled with spectacular sunsets and dramatic architecture, this small, contemplative moment stands out precisely because it looks like something you could step into on any given afternoon.
Coastal communities around the Arcachon Bay have spent decades weaving an intricate network of cycle and walking paths that connect pine forests, ports, and beaches into one continuous outdoor living room. In towns such as Gujan-Mestras, narrow lanes once used primarily by oyster farmers and foresters have been adapted for leisure, allowing cyclists and walkers to slip quietly between working harbors and residential neighborhoods without ever needing a car.
This path culture is deeply tied to the region’s oyster identity: many routes are designed to end (or conveniently pass) near tasting huts where you can sit at simple wooden tables, sample freshly opened oysters, and watch the tide reveal or conceal the sandbanks out in the bay. Because the water level changes so dramatically between high and low tide, the same viewpoint can feel like an entirely different landscape within a few hours – muddy grids of oyster beds at one moment, a glassy expanse of reflected sky the next. For locals, these paths aren’t just recreation; they are the connective tissue between work, family traditions, and an everyday intimacy with one of France’s most quietly distinctive coastal environments.
Thank you, KRISG1711 for sharing this marvelous Click!
Tuesday, February 3, 2026
Where: Fresno, California, United States
Feed: Architecture

Certified image
https://clickapp.com/zk/cid/QmYbfYX8keSyYJE3qQxGXXf117FMngPH9tTYrQmrqVbytn
Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2018799188557930812
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DUT5DrvDpbE
Hey: https://hey.xyz/posts/36rv8e41665gxys8qzf
From the glow of France's coasts we step into another Click from the United States that tilts the camera upward and lets the buildings speak for themselves, echoing Winston Churchill’s famous line: “We shape our buildings; thereafter they shape us.” The composition is classic urban minimalism – a strong vertical of glass and concrete rising into a pale sky, the edges so clean that the tower almost reads like a drawing traced against the light.
By keeping the street level out of frame, the Click invites you to imagine the life happening below: commuters weaving between crosswalks, coffee balanced in one hand and phone in the other, and the quiet ritual of office lights flicking on floor by floor as the day begins. In the reflections, hints of neighboring facades and sky streaks turn the building into a mirror of its own city, a reminder that every skyline is really a cluster of overlapping stories rather than just a set of coordinates on a map.
The photograph also captures something subtle about contemporary American downtowns: the shift from ornate stone to glassy efficiency, from carved cornices to green-tinted curtain walls designed as much for climate control as for aesthetics. Standing at the base of such a tower, your sense of scale is re-calibrated – the grid of windows becomes a kind of vertical calendar of lives, with each rectangle hinting at desks, plants, and late-night screens that never make it into the tourist brochures.
Skyscrapers like the one, captured by our local Clickstar, are not just feats of engineering; they’re social machines that quietly dictate daily rhythms. Elevator banks and lobby security lines create shared pauses where strangers briefly synchronize their day, while open-plan floors and glass-walled meeting rooms redefine what feels “private” at work.
In many American cities, zoning rules in the late 20th century pushed this kind of vertical density into tight downtown cores, which in turn shaped transport networks: light-rail lines, bus corridors, and pedestrian bridges were all oriented around getting people in and out of these tall clusters efficiently. At the same time, the reflective skins of newer towers are calibrated to manage heat and light loads, turning architecture into a quiet partner in the city’s energy footprint. Over years, the presence of these towers shifts where cafés open, where food trucks idle at lunch, and even where street musicians choose to perform – all small, human-scale echoes of decisions once made on drafting tables dozens of floors above street level.
Wednesday, February 4, 2026
Where: 東京都, Tokyo Prefecture, Japan
Feed: Food

Certified image https://clickapp.com/zk/cid/QmakRsrLFdKmVmNANKW7frxQAqN5yehvKqhfo5kiR7bT9Y
Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2019150556346851339
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/clickdeepreals/p/DUWZM5vjjJw/
Hey: https://hey.xyz/posts/hq1khxpphhnzh8n4pg
Midweek, our journey detours into the comforting universe of food with a Click that pairs a beautifully plated Japanese meal with M.F.K. Fisher’s gentle reminder: “First we eat, then we do everything else.” The photo itself is all about composition – lacquered trays, small ceramic dishes, and meticulous portions that transform the table into a grid of flavor and color.
There’s a quiet theater to this arrangement: the contrast between glossy miso soup, the matte surface of rice, and the glint of a small metal chopstick rest, each element carefully placed to guide the diner’s eye and appetite. Even without smelling the broth or hearing the clink of porcelain, you can feel the moment right before the first bite, when conversation pauses and everyone takes a heartbeat to simply appreciate what’s in front of them.
In a world flooded with exaggerated, algorithm-chasing food photos, this Click feels almost meditative – no heavy filters, no forced close-ups, just honest light falling on an everyday meal that many locals might take for granted but that now lives permanently on-chain as a tiny archive of daily life in Japan.
The structure of the meal in this Click hints at the classic ichiju-sansai style – “one soup, three dishes” – a template that has shaped home cooking and traditional set meals in Japan for centuries. The idea is less about strict rules and more about balance: a bowl of rice as anchor, miso soup for warmth, then a trio of side dishes that together weave protein, vegetables, and pickles into a complete nutritional story.
This approach emerged from a mix of Buddhist influences, seasonal agriculture, and historical scarcity, teaching households to stretch ingredients creatively while still honoring the aesthetics of the table. Over time, that sense of balance evolved into an everyday philosophy: meals should harmonize color (greens, whites, reds), cooking methods (raw, grilled, simmered), and flavors (sweet, salty, sour, bitter, umami) rather than rely on portion size alone. In modern cities, busy office workers might grab a convenience-store bento that still echoes this logic – a humble, plastic-box descendant of a very old way of thinking about how food supports both body and mind
We extend our heartfelt gratitude to our local Clickstar!
Thursday, January 29, 2026
Where: Louisville, Kentucky, United States
Feed: General

Certified image
https://clickapp.com/zk/cid/QmTHVmjcjtrCLN5PHwu1FCHdEp19cjeVRg1hxD4erHuUKi
Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2019521787390984544
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DUZCCdwAE4e
Hey: https://hey.xyz/posts/3ze39e5j2k4ptbqxqa0
Downtown Louisville, captured by our local Clickstar, at blue hour has a way of feeling both quietly local and unmistakably cinematic, and this week’s Click leans into that duality with style. The photographer frames a corridor of city light that draws your eye straight toward Fourth Street Live!, the covered entertainment district that slices through the historic core like a neon artery.
Under the translucent canopy of Fourth Street, the glow of signs and LED panels bounces off the glass and brick facades, turning a winter evening into a warm-toned urban amphitheater for date nights, after-work meetups, and visiting basketball fans on game weekends. The Click freezes that moment of transition when office towers are turning dark one window at a time, while the nightlife below is just powering up – a perfect snapshot of how American downtowns are learning to be both workplace and playground in the same narrow blocks.
You can almost hear the ambient soundtrack: a mix of live music from one of the bars inside the complex, the distant hum of traffic on the nearby I‑64, and the murmured conversations of people walking in under the bright canopy to escape the cold. In that sense, this image does what Louisville itself does so well – it blends the comfort of a mid‑South river town with the aspirational glow of a city that likes to punch above its cultural weight.
Fourth Street Live! sits on a street that has been central to Louisville’s story since the late 19th century, when these same blocks were lined with ornate department stores and grand hotels serving riverboat travelers and rail passengers headed west. Many of the surrounding buildings still carry that early-20th-century DNA in their brickwork and cornices, even as the interiors have been reimagined for restaurants, offices, and event spaces.
The modern entertainment complex reshaped this historic corridor in the early 2000s by adding its signature glass-and-steel roof, creating a weather-protected spine of nightlife that can function almost like an indoor street during Kentucky’s hot summers and chilly winters. Because the project sits only a short walk from the KFC Yum! Center, it has become an unofficial extension of the arena concourse on game nights, pulsing with basketball jerseys, visiting fans, and post-concert crowds. For locals, the area is also woven into personal lore – countless first dates, graduation dinners, and birthday parties have started or ended beneath that canopy, layering a lot of small private memories onto one very public strip of lights.
Friday, February 6, 2026
Where: Pimpri-Chinchwad, Maharashtra, India
Feed: Monuments

Certified image https://clickapp.com/zk/cid/QmQDXq3cLZezJKzg3eR9Z4MkP5rbt7rX3a8FCbCZJdxhup
Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2019891678232842431
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/clickdeepreals/p/DUbqNAEAAOR/
Hey: https://hey.xyz/posts/3m4phwvbmq7gw5wng9y
Back on the subcontinent, this week’s Click by HARSHARYAN captures a slice of everyday life that sits somewhere between motion and pause – the kind of scene you might pass a hundred times on your commute and only truly see when you raise a camera. The frame is dense with small details: layered signboards, a tangle of cables like urban vines, and the faint blur of a passing scooter that signals the constant hum of the street.
What makes the image sing is the light – a soft, late-afternoon warmth that pulls color out of painted shopfronts and worn concrete, turning what might otherwise be dismissed as “clutter” into a complex, living collage. There’s an honesty here that resonates with Click’s mission: instead of smoothing the scene into a sterile postcard, the photographer lets the city breathe in all its slightly chaotic charm.
If you linger over the Click, you start noticing micro-stories: the faint reflection of someone waiting at a chai stall, a stack of crates hinting at a nearby market, or a faded film poster half-peeling from a wall. These are the small visual anchors that make a neighborhood feel like home – details that rarely make it into tourism campaigns but mean everything to the people who navigate them daily.
Indian streetscapes like this often grow organically rather than from a formal master plan, and that improvisation creates a visual language all its own. Shop signs are layered as businesses change hands, producing palimpsests of typography where old paint never fully disappears under the new.
Because space is precious, façades double as storage, display, and social space: stacked crates and hanging wares effectively extend the shop out onto the pavement, while narrow ledges and doorsteps become mini seating areas where neighbors trade news. Electric and telecom cables, rather than being buried, remain visible overhead, tracing the history of each new connection like literal lines of communication crossing the sky. Urbanists sometimes call this “informal urbanism,” but for many locals it is simply how the city works – a hyper-efficient use of every available surface, guided more by relationships and opportunity than by diagrams and zoning codes.
This concludes this first February edition of Clicks of the Week!
This edition celebrates 216 new Clicks added to the archive, enriching the global map with fresh moments from France, the USA, Japan and India. Every time you open the Click Camera app and sign a photo into the Digital Trust Network, you’re not just posting – you’re preserving a real moment with verifiable context on-chain, helping to push back against the rising tide of synthetic and misleading imagery.
Want to see your corner of the world featured next? Just keep on Clicking, link your seedphrase to your Nodle app using the same seed phrase, and sign your favorite photos into the network – the next stop on this global journey might be yours.
Now, go relax and enjoy your weekend!
And please, help us spread the word about Click. Encourage your friends and family to submit their Clicks too - it's becoming the top destination for the best, most reliable media. Every contribution helps us improve our collection and gets great content seen by more people.
Before we forget!

Did you know that you can submit your favourite photos to ClickAI? It will provide feedback on how you can improve your next shots. Simply log into www.clickapp.com with your Click camera via WalletConnect, select your image, and click on AI✨ below your image.
With the latest update of the Nodle app, you can submit your favourite Clicks to the AI agent in the apps chat interface. Less friction, more opportunities!
You can then submit it to the AI contest for an entry fee, with the chance to win big if the AI's evaluation is favourable! Curious? Try it out today!
Did this catch your attention? Explore our blog post, Click: Beyond the Filter, to discover how the app powers the ecosystem behind the Digital Trust Network.
Happy Clicking, we can't wait to see what you share!

Nodle bids farewell to Polkadot
The final steps of the migration to ZKsync

Announcing the Creation of the Nodle DAO: A New Era of Inclusive Decentralized Governance
The Nodle Foundation is excited to announce the launch of the Nodle DAO (Decentralized Autonomous Organization), marking a major step toward decentralizing the Nodle Network and placing its future directly in the hands of its community. The creation of the Nodle DAO introduces a structured framework of Nodle Governance Proposals (NGPs), that anyone with a smartphone can vote on. These proposals will allow the community to have a say in the network’s development, ensuring that its direction re...

Winter Wonderland Click Contest
Winter is arriving for most of us and it’s time for the holidays, warm jackets, beanies and gloves! Now’s the time to post those clicks of all things winter and share those snow-covered Clicks in the official “Winter Contest” channel and on X. Let's see how creative you can get with all the holiday decor and winterscapes around you! The best submissions will be determined by our internal team of judges and the best entries will win ZK tokens! YEP, THAT’S RIGHT…ZK TOKENS!! Simply follow t...

Nodle bids farewell to Polkadot
The final steps of the migration to ZKsync

Announcing the Creation of the Nodle DAO: A New Era of Inclusive Decentralized Governance
The Nodle Foundation is excited to announce the launch of the Nodle DAO (Decentralized Autonomous Organization), marking a major step toward decentralizing the Nodle Network and placing its future directly in the hands of its community. The creation of the Nodle DAO introduces a structured framework of Nodle Governance Proposals (NGPs), that anyone with a smartphone can vote on. These proposals will allow the community to have a say in the network’s development, ensuring that its direction re...

Winter Wonderland Click Contest
Winter is arriving for most of us and it’s time for the holidays, warm jackets, beanies and gloves! Now’s the time to post those clicks of all things winter and share those snow-covered Clicks in the official “Winter Contest” channel and on X. Let's see how creative you can get with all the holiday decor and winterscapes around you! The best submissions will be determined by our internal team of judges and the best entries will win ZK tokens! YEP, THAT’S RIGHT…ZK TOKENS!! Simply follow t...
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