Popular Posts

Editor'S Choice - 2024

Photoproject

EVERY DAY PHOTOGRAPHERS THROUGHOUT THE WORLD are looking for new ways to tell stories or capture what we didn’t notice before. We choose interesting photo projects and ask their authors what they wanted to say. This week we are publishing a project by Sophie Mayen, collecting stories of people with scars, each of which is unique.

Read More

EVERY DAY PHOTOGRAPHERS THROUGHOUT THE WORLD are looking for new ways to tell stories or capture what we didn’t notice before. We choose interesting photo projects and ask their authors what they wanted to say. This week we are publishing a series of "Reassign" by Chilean photographer Claudia Gonzalez about Cuban transgender people.

Read More

EVERY DAY PHOTOGRAPHERS THROUGHOUT THE WORLD are looking for new ways to tell stories or capture what we didn’t notice before. We choose interesting photo projects and ask their authors what they wanted to say. This week - the series "Female Fighters" by British photographer Amelia Schaefer, who photographed more than 20 kickboxers and thus tried to show the other side of women's life.

Read More

EVERY DAY PHOTOGRAPHERS THROUGHOUT THE WORLD are looking for new ways to tell stories or capture what we didn’t notice before. We choose interesting photo projects and ask their authors what they wanted to say. This week we are publishing the project of the South African photographer Oliver Kruger "Golden Youth", who for several years filmed visitors to the festival of street fashion and culture in Johannesburg.

Read More

Every day, photographers around the world are looking for new ways to tell stories or to capture what we had not noticed before. We choose interesting photo projects and ask their authors what they wanted to say. This week is the Humanæ series of the Brazilian photo artist Angelica Dass: an open project in which she explores the ideas of the human community and individuality.

Read More

EVERY DAY PHOTOGRAPHERS THROUGHOUT THE WORLD are looking for new ways to tell stories or capture what we didn’t notice before. We choose interesting photo projects and ask their authors what they wanted to say. This week we are publishing the project "Julia Wannabe" by photographer Anna Grzhelevskaya from Warsaw.

Read More

EVERY DAY PHOTOGRAPHERS THROUGHOUT THE WORLD are looking for new ways to tell stories or capture what we didn’t notice before. We choose interesting photo projects and ask their authors what they wanted to say. This week we are publishing the project "Show" by London-based photographer Toby Coulson. For several years now, he has traveled all over the UK and has been taking pictures of animal exhibitions — from rabbits to cats — in the hands of owners, jury members and trainers, in order to show unusual relationships between animals and people.

Read More

EVERY DAY PHOTOGRAPHERS THROUGHOUT THE WORLD are looking for new ways to tell stories or capture what we didn’t notice before. We choose interesting photo projects and ask their authors what they wanted to say. This week is the NKOSOZANA series by South African photographer Dylan Davis, a graduate of the AAA School of Advertising in Cape Town.

Read More

Age is one of the topics that (excuse me) will never become obsolete, and, which is gratifying, aging is increasingly being heard in full voice. In American Horror Story, all characters are “stolen by a show.” 64-year-old beauty Jessica Lange, Belgian designer Bernhard Willhelm produces bows of bold clothing on even bolder models of age, and Iris Apfel and Carmen Dell'Orefis distress advice to the young.

Read More

EVERY DAY PHOTOGRAPHERS THROUGHOUT THE WORLD are looking for new ways to tell stories or capture what we didn’t notice before. We choose interesting photo projects and ask their authors what they wanted to say. This week we are publishing a new photo editor for New York magazine Tirza Brott, dedicated to the study of maturity, as well as external and internal beauty.

Read More

EVERY DAY PHOTOGRAPHERS THROUGHOUT THE WORLD are looking for new ways to tell stories or capture what we didn’t notice before. We choose interesting photo projects and ask their authors what they wanted to say. This week is the "Terrain" series by American photographer Jackie Nickerson, who now divides her time between Ireland and South Africa.

Read More

EVERY DAY PHOTOGRAPHERS THROUGHOUT THE WORLD are looking for new ways to tell stories or capture what we didn’t notice before. We choose interesting photo projects and ask their authors what they wanted to say. This week is the New Yorker Paul Nathan's "Groomed" series, which shoots dogs according to the rules of beauty photography.

Read More

EVERY DAY PHOTOGRAPHERS THROUGHOUT THE WORLD are looking for new ways to tell stories or capture what we didn’t notice before. We choose interesting photo projects and ask their authors what they wanted to say. This week we are publishing a series of "In My Skin" by photographer Michel Sank, for whom she shot girls and young men from 16 to 25 years old, who have done plastic operations to correct their appearance, plan to make them or modify their body in other available ways.

Read More

EVERY DAY PHOTOGRAPHERS THROUGHOUT THE WORLD are looking for new ways to tell stories or capture what we didn’t notice before. We choose interesting photo projects and ask their authors what they wanted to say. This week we are publishing the "Clear Cut" series by German photographer Christoph Soder, in which he explored the dialogue of the individual and society through everyday activities.

Read More

EVERY DAY PHOTOGRAPHERS THROUGHOUT THE WORLD are looking for new ways to tell stories or capture what we didn’t notice before. We choose interesting photo projects and ask their authors what they wanted to say. This week we are publishing the project "Self Promenade", filmed by a duet of photographers Naveen Cala from India and Louise Dorr from Brazil.

Read More

EVERY DAY PHOTOGRAPHERS THROUGHOUT THE WORLD are looking for new ways to tell stories or capture what we didn’t notice before. We choose interesting photo projects and ask their authors what they wanted to say. This week is a series of “All that remains” of a photographer from Bangladesh and a teacher at the South Asian Institute of Photography, Sarker Protik, who has documented the last years of his elderly relatives in an attempt to understand what a long life leads to.

Read More