
Hello fellow Clickstars!
This week’s Clicks of the Week drift through places where festival spirit, high‑country silence, street‑corner grit, roadside daydreams and village memory all leave their mark—and then get anchored in the Click archive as certified media, frozen exactly as they were in the split second the shutter dropped. These are the kinds of scenes you might pass without a second glance—a bamboo tower rising between office blocks, a winding ridge road with a lone hiker, a hand‑painted object on a shelf, a graffiti‑covered doorway in a narrow lane, a long shadow on sun‑warmed asphalt—but once they are signed with provenance inside the Digital Trust Network, they gain a different kind of gravity.
Settle in and let these five Clicks carry you from Riga’s still, stone-filled remembrance to Maharashtra’s rising monument-in-the-making, from Beverly Hills’ Lunar New Year drumbeats to Silesia’s post‑industrial lakes turned local escape, and finally into Puerto Rico’s green interior, where time and weather can turn utility into something like folklore.
Throughout the week, the team handpicks Clicks to promote the different feeds and Clickstars on social media, like X and Instagram 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!
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 315 Clicks, totaling a staggering 72,604 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.
Where: Boltaña, Huesca, Spain
Feed: General

Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2031083358743105816
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DVrLsQwgLEZ
This week begins with a memory from ENKE's weekend stay at the Hotel & Spa Monasterio de Boltaña — one of only two five-star hotels in the entire province of Huesca, and the only one to carry the official designation of Hotel Monumento from the Aragonese government. The building has been accumulating lives for nearly four centuries. In 1651, a local nobleman donated a house and a small hermitage to the Discalced Carmelites, who were drawn here by the fertile microclimate of the Ara valley — sheltered by the Pyrenees, it sits somewhere between mountain and Mediterranean. The monks built their church in the planta jesuítica style — a barrel-vaulted nave with lateral chapels under small domes — sober on the outside, surprisingly grand within. After Spain's 19th-century ecclesiastical disentailment, the Carmelites were forced to leave, and the building changed hands repeatedly until a celebrated surgeon from Sobrarbe purchased it in 1910 and converted it into a tuberculosis sanatorium, a fate that was common for remote monasteries with clean mountain air and spring water nearby.
The transformation into a luxury hotel opened in 2005 and has since been topped up with a 1,100 m² spa, 96 rooms, 40 villas with Pyrenean views, a 17th-century chapel that can hold 220 guests, and a restaurant — the Marboré — where chef Rubén Pertusa now cooks migas de pastor, lamb from the valley and cheesecake del Pirineo made with local Bal de Broto cheeses. At night, with the Ara River flowing just below and the peaks of the Ordesa and Monte Perdido National Park looming in the dark, the long vaulted corridors feel exactly as they must have when monks walked them with candlelight — silent, layered, unhurried. Your Click catches precisely that hour: when the stone cools, the guests disappear, and the building remembers what it used to be.
Where: Mürren, Bern, Switzerland
Feed: General

Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2031455821867938221
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DVt09kUDlKT
From the warmth of Aragonese stone, the focus shifts to something altogether more Swiss — the logical and the spectacular running side by side. AMDSL caught one of the regular supply helicopter runs above the Winteregg stop on the Lauterbrunnen–Mürren Mountain Railway, known locally as the BLM or Mürrenbahn. Winteregg sits at around 1,500 metres between Grütschalp and the car-free village of Mürren and recently underwent major upgrades as part of a CHF 63 million, four-year renovation project that raised the line's top speed from 30 to 50 km/h and made the station fully accessible under Swiss disability legislation. The new rolling stock was literally lifted by crane onto the track at Winteregg before being transferred to the Grütschalp workshop — so helicopters are nothing new here, they are simply part of how the mountain does its housekeeping.
Mürren is unreachable by road; everything from building materials to fresh produce arrives by cable car, narrow-gauge train or, when urgency or bulk demands it, by helicopter. The Eiger, Mönch and Jungfrau form the permanent backdrop to all of this activity — three of the most recognisable north faces in the Alps, visible in one glance from almost any point on the Panorama Trail that runs along the ridge. Just beside the Winteregg station stands the famous oversized wooden Panorama Swing, designed purely for the pleasure of leaning out above the valley with those peaks ahead of you. Your Click places a working helicopter — cargo lines, serious business — right above that swing built for pure joy, and in doing so captures something essentially Swiss: beauty and utility sharing the same airspace, neither one diminishing the other.
Where: Battalgazi, Malatya, Türkiye
Feed: Street Art

Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2031829179814002823
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DVwexYLgPrq
This Clickstar takes us to a corner of eastern Turkey that wears its history quietly. Battalgazi is the old city of Malatya — Eski Malatya, as locals still call it — built on the site of ancient Melitene, a settlement that passed through Roman, Byzantine, Seljuk and Ottoman hands and left behind a layered outdoor museum of fortifications, mosques, caravanserais and traditional courtyard houses. The district's Ulu Mosque dates to 1224 and the reign of the Seljuk sultan Alaaddin Keykubat; it stands intact today, one of the most important surviving examples of Seljuk religious architecture in Anatolia. Modern Malatya is famous worldwide for a more edible reason: it produces the majority of the globe's dried apricots, its high plateau with scorching summers and cold winters creating exactly the right conditions for the fruit that turned the city into a byword for golden sweetness.
Against this backdrop of ancient walls and apricot orchards, your Click captures a vase of bright sunflowers painted in the style of French Impressionism — a subject Van Gogh would have recognized instantly, transplanted into an Anatolian street corner. It is the kind of small collision that makes street art genuinely interesting: a very European visual language, bold yellows and curved petals, showing up in a town whose own dominant colour has always been the warm gold of fruit laid out to dry under the summer sun. The pairing is not ironic so much as quietly generous — a reminder that beauty moves across borders without needing a passport, and that in a city shaped by a dozen civilisations, one more foreign influence simply adds another layer to the wall.
Where: Rognonas, Bouches-du-Rhône, France
Feed: Monuments

Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2032207990686957691
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DVy_Jb2Dv0G
MOI2233 brings us to the heart of a small Provençal village with a surprisingly outsized story to tell. Standing in front of the Église Saint-Pierre-ès-Liens in Rognonas — a commune of around 4,500 people on the Durance plain just south of Avignon — your Click captures an equestrian statue of Jeanne d'Arc that is genuinely rare among French war memorials. Most communes chose a simple soldier, a poilu, to mark the dead of 1914–1918. Rognonas lost 67 of its roughly 1,650 inhabitants in that war — a staggering proportion — and its inhabitants decided from the start that the memorial should be something grander, something placed at the centre of the village in front of the church and facing the town hall. The figure of Jeanne was a calculated choice: she had been canonised on 16 May 1920, and a few months later France declared a national holiday in her honour, making her simultaneously a Catholic saint and a secular patriotic symbol — the Republic could not object.
The statue itself has a distinguished pedigree. Mathurin Moreau (1822–1912), who served as mayor of Paris's 19th arrondissement and was known across France for his decorative fountains and public monuments, sculpted the figure of Jeanne; the horse was the work of Pierre Le Nordez, a sculptor who specialised in equestrian forms. The original cast was inaugurated in Montebourg in 1899, and at least six copies exist across France — Rognonas acquired one and set it atop a new war memorial base in 1924. In your Click, taken on a clear March morning with a JCB digger visible in the background and the limestone church wall catching the winter sun, the bronze rider still pulls the eye upward just as the village intended a century ago: one arm raised, flag cutting the sky, reminding a quiet square that small places carry large memories.
Where: Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh
Feed: Architecture

Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2032565544033927566
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DV1thvoADlb
We close the week with a burst of colour from Bangladesh's capital, shared by this Clickstar. The object in the Click — a spherical, hand-formed piece finished in bold rainbow bands of red, yellow, green, blue and purple, with concentric square relief patterns pressed into its surface — sits neatly within a long and lively tradition of Bangladeshi artisanal craft that uses clay, wood, jute and pith to create objects that are at once toys, decorative pieces and cultural statements. Artisans in and around Dhaka have been producing this kind of tactile, graphic-patterned work for generations, turning everyday materials into objects that carry the visual language of folk art while fitting just as naturally into a contemporary apartment as into a village market. Aarong, the country's most beloved craft retailer, has spent decades formalising this heritage and connecting rural artisans with urban and international buyers — but the aesthetic DNA of the work goes back much further, to the putul doll-makers, the terracotta potters and the weavers whose traditions predate the city itself.
What makes your Click so effective is precisely its restraint. The object is placed against a plain white wall, the light falling evenly across it from one side, letting the craftsmanship do all the talking. The concentric diamond pattern embossed on the yellow face catches the light in a way that reveals the pressure of the artisan's hands; the seams where the coloured sections meet are slightly uneven, which is entirely the point — this is not factory output but something made with intention and touch. In a city of 20 million where colour is everywhere, from painted rickshaws to market stalls overflowing with fabrics, it takes a steady eye to isolate one small object and let it speak clearly. This Click does exactly that.
That wraps this edition of Clicks of the Week—five certified Clicks, five local stories, and one shared thread: real places and real moments, captured as‑they‑happened and turned into verifiable, on‑chain records inside the Digital Trust Network. Week after week, our Clickstars show that authenticity is not a filter but a deliberate act, and that once a moment is signed, stored and surfaced as trusted media, even a makeshift festival structure, a quiet mountain path, a splatter of street art or a simple roadside silhouette can outlast the scroll.
Want to be featured next? Keep Clicking, keep signing, and keep showing the world what authentic looks like—one capture at a time.
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.
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!
This week’s Clicks of the Week drift through places where festival spirit, high‑country silence, street‑corner grit, roadside daydreams and village memory all leave their mark—and then get anchored in the Click archive as certified media, frozen exactly as they were in the split second the shutter dropped. These are the kinds of scenes you might pass without a second glance—a bamboo tower rising between office blocks, a winding ridge road with a lone hiker, a hand‑painted object on a shelf, a graffiti‑covered doorway in a narrow lane, a long shadow on sun‑warmed asphalt—but once they are signed with provenance inside the Digital Trust Network, they gain a different kind of gravity.
Settle in and let these five Clicks carry you from Riga’s still, stone-filled remembrance to Maharashtra’s rising monument-in-the-making, from Beverly Hills’ Lunar New Year drumbeats to Silesia’s post‑industrial lakes turned local escape, and finally into Puerto Rico’s green interior, where time and weather can turn utility into something like folklore.
Throughout the week, the team handpicks Clicks to promote the different feeds and Clickstars on social media, like X and Instagram 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!
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 315 Clicks, totaling a staggering 72,604 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.
Where: Boltaña, Huesca, Spain
Feed: General

Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2031083358743105816
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DVrLsQwgLEZ
This week begins with a memory from ENKE's weekend stay at the Hotel & Spa Monasterio de Boltaña — one of only two five-star hotels in the entire province of Huesca, and the only one to carry the official designation of Hotel Monumento from the Aragonese government. The building has been accumulating lives for nearly four centuries. In 1651, a local nobleman donated a house and a small hermitage to the Discalced Carmelites, who were drawn here by the fertile microclimate of the Ara valley — sheltered by the Pyrenees, it sits somewhere between mountain and Mediterranean. The monks built their church in the planta jesuítica style — a barrel-vaulted nave with lateral chapels under small domes — sober on the outside, surprisingly grand within. After Spain's 19th-century ecclesiastical disentailment, the Carmelites were forced to leave, and the building changed hands repeatedly until a celebrated surgeon from Sobrarbe purchased it in 1910 and converted it into a tuberculosis sanatorium, a fate that was common for remote monasteries with clean mountain air and spring water nearby.
The transformation into a luxury hotel opened in 2005 and has since been topped up with a 1,100 m² spa, 96 rooms, 40 villas with Pyrenean views, a 17th-century chapel that can hold 220 guests, and a restaurant — the Marboré — where chef Rubén Pertusa now cooks migas de pastor, lamb from the valley and cheesecake del Pirineo made with local Bal de Broto cheeses. At night, with the Ara River flowing just below and the peaks of the Ordesa and Monte Perdido National Park looming in the dark, the long vaulted corridors feel exactly as they must have when monks walked them with candlelight — silent, layered, unhurried. Your Click catches precisely that hour: when the stone cools, the guests disappear, and the building remembers what it used to be.
Where: Mürren, Bern, Switzerland
Feed: General

Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2031455821867938221
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DVt09kUDlKT
From the warmth of Aragonese stone, the focus shifts to something altogether more Swiss — the logical and the spectacular running side by side. AMDSL caught one of the regular supply helicopter runs above the Winteregg stop on the Lauterbrunnen–Mürren Mountain Railway, known locally as the BLM or Mürrenbahn. Winteregg sits at around 1,500 metres between Grütschalp and the car-free village of Mürren and recently underwent major upgrades as part of a CHF 63 million, four-year renovation project that raised the line's top speed from 30 to 50 km/h and made the station fully accessible under Swiss disability legislation. The new rolling stock was literally lifted by crane onto the track at Winteregg before being transferred to the Grütschalp workshop — so helicopters are nothing new here, they are simply part of how the mountain does its housekeeping.
Mürren is unreachable by road; everything from building materials to fresh produce arrives by cable car, narrow-gauge train or, when urgency or bulk demands it, by helicopter. The Eiger, Mönch and Jungfrau form the permanent backdrop to all of this activity — three of the most recognisable north faces in the Alps, visible in one glance from almost any point on the Panorama Trail that runs along the ridge. Just beside the Winteregg station stands the famous oversized wooden Panorama Swing, designed purely for the pleasure of leaning out above the valley with those peaks ahead of you. Your Click places a working helicopter — cargo lines, serious business — right above that swing built for pure joy, and in doing so captures something essentially Swiss: beauty and utility sharing the same airspace, neither one diminishing the other.
Where: Battalgazi, Malatya, Türkiye
Feed: Street Art

Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2031829179814002823
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DVwexYLgPrq
This Clickstar takes us to a corner of eastern Turkey that wears its history quietly. Battalgazi is the old city of Malatya — Eski Malatya, as locals still call it — built on the site of ancient Melitene, a settlement that passed through Roman, Byzantine, Seljuk and Ottoman hands and left behind a layered outdoor museum of fortifications, mosques, caravanserais and traditional courtyard houses. The district's Ulu Mosque dates to 1224 and the reign of the Seljuk sultan Alaaddin Keykubat; it stands intact today, one of the most important surviving examples of Seljuk religious architecture in Anatolia. Modern Malatya is famous worldwide for a more edible reason: it produces the majority of the globe's dried apricots, its high plateau with scorching summers and cold winters creating exactly the right conditions for the fruit that turned the city into a byword for golden sweetness.
Against this backdrop of ancient walls and apricot orchards, your Click captures a vase of bright sunflowers painted in the style of French Impressionism — a subject Van Gogh would have recognized instantly, transplanted into an Anatolian street corner. It is the kind of small collision that makes street art genuinely interesting: a very European visual language, bold yellows and curved petals, showing up in a town whose own dominant colour has always been the warm gold of fruit laid out to dry under the summer sun. The pairing is not ironic so much as quietly generous — a reminder that beauty moves across borders without needing a passport, and that in a city shaped by a dozen civilisations, one more foreign influence simply adds another layer to the wall.
Where: Rognonas, Bouches-du-Rhône, France
Feed: Monuments

Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2032207990686957691
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DVy_Jb2Dv0G
MOI2233 brings us to the heart of a small Provençal village with a surprisingly outsized story to tell. Standing in front of the Église Saint-Pierre-ès-Liens in Rognonas — a commune of around 4,500 people on the Durance plain just south of Avignon — your Click captures an equestrian statue of Jeanne d'Arc that is genuinely rare among French war memorials. Most communes chose a simple soldier, a poilu, to mark the dead of 1914–1918. Rognonas lost 67 of its roughly 1,650 inhabitants in that war — a staggering proportion — and its inhabitants decided from the start that the memorial should be something grander, something placed at the centre of the village in front of the church and facing the town hall. The figure of Jeanne was a calculated choice: she had been canonised on 16 May 1920, and a few months later France declared a national holiday in her honour, making her simultaneously a Catholic saint and a secular patriotic symbol — the Republic could not object.
The statue itself has a distinguished pedigree. Mathurin Moreau (1822–1912), who served as mayor of Paris's 19th arrondissement and was known across France for his decorative fountains and public monuments, sculpted the figure of Jeanne; the horse was the work of Pierre Le Nordez, a sculptor who specialised in equestrian forms. The original cast was inaugurated in Montebourg in 1899, and at least six copies exist across France — Rognonas acquired one and set it atop a new war memorial base in 1924. In your Click, taken on a clear March morning with a JCB digger visible in the background and the limestone church wall catching the winter sun, the bronze rider still pulls the eye upward just as the village intended a century ago: one arm raised, flag cutting the sky, reminding a quiet square that small places carry large memories.
Where: Dhaka, Dhaka, Bangladesh
Feed: Architecture

Social links
X: https://x.com/clickdeepreals/status/2032565544033927566
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/DV1thvoADlb
We close the week with a burst of colour from Bangladesh's capital, shared by this Clickstar. The object in the Click — a spherical, hand-formed piece finished in bold rainbow bands of red, yellow, green, blue and purple, with concentric square relief patterns pressed into its surface — sits neatly within a long and lively tradition of Bangladeshi artisanal craft that uses clay, wood, jute and pith to create objects that are at once toys, decorative pieces and cultural statements. Artisans in and around Dhaka have been producing this kind of tactile, graphic-patterned work for generations, turning everyday materials into objects that carry the visual language of folk art while fitting just as naturally into a contemporary apartment as into a village market. Aarong, the country's most beloved craft retailer, has spent decades formalising this heritage and connecting rural artisans with urban and international buyers — but the aesthetic DNA of the work goes back much further, to the putul doll-makers, the terracotta potters and the weavers whose traditions predate the city itself.
What makes your Click so effective is precisely its restraint. The object is placed against a plain white wall, the light falling evenly across it from one side, letting the craftsmanship do all the talking. The concentric diamond pattern embossed on the yellow face catches the light in a way that reveals the pressure of the artisan's hands; the seams where the coloured sections meet are slightly uneven, which is entirely the point — this is not factory output but something made with intention and touch. In a city of 20 million where colour is everywhere, from painted rickshaws to market stalls overflowing with fabrics, it takes a steady eye to isolate one small object and let it speak clearly. This Click does exactly that.
That wraps this edition of Clicks of the Week—five certified Clicks, five local stories, and one shared thread: real places and real moments, captured as‑they‑happened and turned into verifiable, on‑chain records inside the Digital Trust Network. Week after week, our Clickstars show that authenticity is not a filter but a deliberate act, and that once a moment is signed, stored and surfaced as trusted media, even a makeshift festival structure, a quiet mountain path, a splatter of street art or a simple roadside silhouette can outlast the scroll.
Want to be featured next? Keep Clicking, keep signing, and keep showing the world what authentic looks like—one capture at a time.
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.
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...

Nodle. Click. Agents.
Why decentralized messaging matters more than everIn today’s ever-shifting digital terrain, the struggle for uncensored, verifiable communication is at the heart of personal sovereignty. Nodle has been working on XMTP integration into their apps for months. In June, we released the public beta on iOS, allowing users to connect privately and without a middleman. This experience is now live on Android, enabling our global user base to benefit from private and encrypted chat. This launch of Nodl...

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...

Nodle. Click. Agents.
Why decentralized messaging matters more than everIn today’s ever-shifting digital terrain, the struggle for uncensored, verifiable communication is at the heart of personal sovereignty. Nodle has been working on XMTP integration into their apps for months. In June, we released the public beta on iOS, allowing users to connect privately and without a middleman. This experience is now live on Android, enabling our global user base to benefit from private and encrypted chat. This launch of Nodl...
Nodle connects the world by using smartphones as nodes to create the Digital Trust Network. NODL | https://nodle.com
Nodle connects the world by using smartphones as nodes to create the Digital Trust Network. NODL | https://nodle.com
Share Dialog
Share Dialog

Subscribe to Nodle Network

Subscribe to Nodle Network
>800 subscribers
>800 subscribers
No activity yet