Serbia Photo Tours

Serbia Photo Tours We do photography tours in Belgrade and in Serbia.To book a tour, please email us at [email protected] We do photography tours in Belgrade and in Serbia.

Serbia is a country in southeast Europe, in the middle of the Balkans, where the East meets the West. Throughout history...
01/09/2020

Serbia is a country in southeast Europe, in the middle of the Balkans, where the East meets the West. Throughout history, Serbia has always found itself nested between two opposites. Centuries ago it separated the Eastern from the Western Roman Empires, the Byzantium from the Roman Empire. This may come as a surprise, but no fewer than 16 Roman emperors were born on the territory of today’s Serbia. During the Middle Ages, the country became a bridge between the Ottoman Empire and the Christian West; come to the Cold War, Serbia hovered between NATO and the Warsaw Pact.
The result is a multiethnic and multicultural country that is home to the Serbian majority and some 40 ethnic groups. But such variety is not limited just to the people. Nature is no less diverse. Vojvodina in the north is the flatland, Šumadija, with its hills and wide-open valleys, is named after the extensive forests that once covered the land, and in the southwest lie the massifs and towering peaks. Serbia is home to Europe’s largest river, the Danube, alongside many smaller ones, and a variety of natural and artificial lakes, not to mention the largest sand steppe in Europe.
A country of contrasts, the bustling metropolis, busy cities, laid-back towns, sleepy villages and magnificent countryside, Serbia caters to all tastes. The warmth of the people, the kindness, and the atmosphere are unmatched as if everyone was born with a smile on their face. So don’t be surprised when you get three kisses – it’s how we do it.
                     

Serbia is a country in southeast Europe, in the middle of the Balkans, where the East meets the West. Throughout history...
30/08/2020

Serbia is a country in southeast Europe, in the middle of the Balkans, where the East meets the West. Throughout history, Serbia has always found itself nested between two opposites. Centuries ago it separated the Eastern from the Western Roman Empires, the Byzantium from the Roman Empire. This may come as a surprise, but no fewer than 16 Roman emperors were born on the territory of today’s Serbia. During the Middle Ages, the country became a bridge between the Ottoman Empire and the Christian West; come to the Cold War, Serbia hovered between NATO and the Warsaw Pact.
The result is a multiethnic and multicultural country that is home to the Serbian majority and some 40 ethnic groups. But such variety is not limited just to the people. Nature is no less diverse. Vojvodina in the north is the flatland, Šumadija, with its hills and wide-open valleys, is named after the extensive forests that once covered the land, and in the southwest lie the massifs and towering peaks. Serbia is home to Europe’s largest river, the Danube, alongside many smaller ones, and a variety of natural and artificial lakes, not to mention the largest sand steppe in Europe.
A country of contrasts, the bustling metropolis, busy cities, laid-back towns, sleepy villages and magnificent countryside, Serbia caters to all tastes. The warmth of the people, the kindness, and the atmosphere are unmatched as if everyone was born with a smile on their face. So don’t be surprised when you get three kisses – it’s how we do it.

Serbia is a country in southeast Europe, in the middle of the Balkans, where the East meets the West. Throughout history...
30/08/2020

Serbia is a country in southeast Europe, in the middle of the Balkans, where the East meets the West. Throughout history, Serbia has always found itself nested between two opposites. Centuries ago it separated the Eastern from the Western Roman Empires, the Byzantium from the Roman Empire. This may come as a surprise, but no fewer than 16 Roman emperors were born on the territory of today’s Serbia. During the Middle Ages, the country became a bridge between the Ottoman Empire and the Christian West; come to the Cold War, Serbia hovered between NATO and the Warsaw Pact.
The result is a multiethnic and multicultural country that is home to the Serbian majority and some 40 ethnic groups. But such variety is not limited just to the people. Nature is no less diverse. Vojvodina in the north is the flatland, Šumadija, with its hills and wide-open valleys, is named after the extensive forests that once covered the land, and in the southwest lie the massifs and towering peaks. Serbia is home to Europe’s largest river, the Danube, alongside many smaller ones, and a variety of natural and artificial lakes, not to mention the largest sand steppe in Europe.
A country of contrasts, the bustling metropolis, busy cities, laid-back towns, sleepy villages and magnificent countryside, Serbia caters to all tastes. The warmth of the people, the kindness, and the atmosphere are unmatched as if everyone was born with a smile on their face. So don’t be surprised when you get three kisses – it’s how we do it.
@ Rajačke Pimnice I Rajački Vinogradi

Out of Focus TourThere is so much more than meets the eye in Belgrade! If you are a photographer, amateur or professiona...
01/08/2019

Out of Focus Tour
There is so much more than meets the eye in Belgrade! If you are a photographer, amateur or professional, with an eye for detail and a desire to see, feel and capture the unusual and the odd, join us on the Out of Focus tour. Follow us off the beaten track, away from the high streets and crowds, and experience Belgrade as you would never expect it – enchanting old buildings alongside marvels of modern design, local shops and hidden, quaint old cafés with local folk and traditional customs.

Belgrade Communist Photo TourHow about a whirl in a time machine and a jump back to the 1950s, 60s and 70s? Perhaps a st...
29/07/2019

Belgrade Communist Photo Tour
How about a whirl in a time machine and a jump back to the 1950s, 60s and 70s? Perhaps a stroll through history along the open streets and boulevards of New Belgrade, past the mass-produced brutalist blocks of flats conceived by Tito’s architects as housing for the city’s new denizens? See the monumental Yugoslav Communist Party headquarters, a de facto center of power in the former country, along with the museums and monuments from the time when Belgrade was the capital of Yugoslavia.

Serbia is a country in southeast Europe, in the middle of the Balkans, where the East meets the West. Throughout history...
09/07/2019

Serbia is a country in southeast Europe, in the middle of the Balkans, where the East meets the West. Throughout history, Serbia has always found itself nested between two opposites. Centuries ago it separated the Eastern from the Western Roman Empires, the Byzantium from the Roman Empire. This may come as a surprise, but no fewer than 16 Roman emperors were born on the territory of today’s Serbia. During the Middle Ages, the country became a bridge between the Ottoman Empire and the Christian West; come to the Cold War, Serbia hovered between NATO and the Warsaw Pact.
The result is a multiethnic and multicultural country that is home to the Serbian majority and some 40 ethnic groups. But such variety is not limited just to the people. Nature is no less diverse. Vojvodina in the north is the flatland, Šumadija, with its hills and wide-open valleys, is named after the extensive forests that once covered the land, and in the southwest lie the massifs and towering peaks. Serbia is home to Europe’s largest river, the Danube, alongside many smaller ones, and a variety of natural and artificial lakes, not to mention the largest sand steppe in Europe.
A country of contrasts, the bustling metropolis, busy cities, laid-back towns, sleepy villages and magnificent countryside, Serbia caters to all tastes. The warmth of the people, the kindness, and the atmosphere are unmatched as if everyone was born with a smile on their face. So don’t be surprised when you get three kisses – it’s how we do it.

Serbia is a country in southeast Europe, in the middle of the Balkans, where the East meets the West. Throughout history...
07/05/2019

Serbia is a country in southeast Europe, in the middle of the Balkans, where the East meets the West. Throughout history, Serbia has always found itself nested between two opposites. Centuries ago it separated the Eastern from the Western Roman Empires, the Byzantium from the Roman Empire. This may come as a surprise, but no fewer than 16 Roman emperors were born on the territory of today’s Serbia. During the Middle Ages, the country became a bridge between the Ottoman Empire and the Christian West; come to the Cold War, Serbia hovered between NATO and the Warsaw Pact.
The result is a multiethnic and multicultural country that is home to the Serbian majority and some 40 ethnic groups. But such variety is not limited just to the people. Nature is no less diverse. Vojvodina in the north is the flatland, Šumadija, with its hills and wide-open valleys, is named after the extensive forests that once covered the land, and in the southwest lie the massifs and towering peaks. Serbia is home to Europe’s largest river, the Danube, alongside many smaller ones, and a variety of natural and artificial lakes, not to mention the largest sand steppe in Europe.
A country of contrasts, the bustling metropolis, busy cities, laid-back towns, sleepy villages and magnificent countryside, Serbia caters to all tastes. The warmth of the people, the kindness, and the atmosphere are unmatched as if everyone was born with a smile on their face. So don’t be surprised when you get three kisses – it’s how we do it.

Serbia is a country in southeast Europe, in the middle of the Balkans, where the East meets the West. Throughout history...
05/05/2019

Serbia is a country in southeast Europe, in the middle of the Balkans, where the East meets the West. Throughout history, Serbia has always found itself nested between two opposites. Centuries ago it separated the Eastern from the Western Roman Empires, the Byzantium from the Roman Empire. This may come as a surprise, but no fewer than 16 Roman emperors were born on the territory of today’s Serbia. During the Middle Ages, the country became a bridge between the Ottoman Empire and the Christian West; come to the Cold War, Serbia hovered between NATO and the Warsaw Pact.
The result is a multiethnic and multicultural country that is home to the Serbian majority and some 40 ethnic groups. But such variety is not limited just to the people. Nature is no less diverse. Vojvodina in the north is the flatland, Šumadija, with its hills and wide-open valleys, is named after the extensive forests that once covered the land, and in the southwest lie the massifs and towering peaks. Serbia is home to Europe’s largest river, the Danube, alongside many smaller ones, and a variety of natural and artificial lakes, not to mention the largest sand steppe in Europe.
A country of contrasts, the bustling metropolis, busy cities, laid-back towns, sleepy villages and magnificent countryside, Serbia caters to all tastes. The warmth of the people, the kindness, and the atmosphere are unmatched as if everyone was born with a smile on their face. So don’t be surprised when you get three kisses – it’s how we do it.

Serbia is a country in southeast Europe, in the middle of the Balkans, where the East meets the West. Throughout history...
04/05/2019

Serbia is a country in southeast Europe, in the middle of the Balkans, where the East meets the West. Throughout history, Serbia has always found itself nested between two opposites. Centuries ago it separated the Eastern from the Western Roman Empires, the Byzantium from the Roman Empire. This may come as a surprise, but no fewer than 16 Roman emperors were born on the territory of today’s Serbia. During the Middle Ages, the country became a bridge between the Ottoman Empire and the Christian West; come to the Cold War, Serbia hovered between NATO and the Warsaw Pact.
The result is a multiethnic and multicultural country that is home to the Serbian majority and some 40 ethnic groups. But such variety is not limited just to the people. Nature is no less diverse. Vojvodina in the north is the flatland, Šumadija, with its hills and wide-open valleys, is named after the extensive forests that once covered the land, and in the southwest lie the massifs and towering peaks. Serbia is home to Europe’s largest river, the Danube, alongside many smaller ones, and a variety of natural and artificial lakes, not to mention the largest sand steppe in Europe.
A country of contrasts, the bustling metropolis, busy cities, laid-back towns, sleepy villages and magnificent countryside, Serbia caters to all tastes. The warmth of the people, the kindness, and the atmosphere are unmatched as if everyone was born with a smile on their face. So don’t be surprised when you get three kisses – it’s how we do it.

Out of Focus TourThere is so much more than meets the eye in Belgrade! If you are a photographer, amateur or professiona...
19/02/2019

Out of Focus Tour
There is so much more than meets the eye in Belgrade! If you are a photographer, amateur or professional, with an eye for detail and a desire to see, feel and capture the unusual and the odd, join us on the Out of Focus tour. Follow us off the beaten track, away from the high streets and crowds, and experience Belgrade as you would never expect it – enchanting old buildings alongside marvels of modern design, local shops and hidden, quaint old cafés with local folk and traditional customs.

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Belgrade
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