Deep Breeding featuring top models. Styled to match their pup coutner parts. Is it racest?! nah. Models: Emily Didonato, Jourdan Dunn Ola Rudnicka Aleksandra Ola Rudnicka Cara Delevingne Liu Wen Charlotte Free Kid Plotnikova Deep Breeding Garage Magazine
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Erik Fallberg Photographed by Tomas Falmer
There is something deeply intimate about a bedroom that is not trying to be seductive. This editorial featuring Erik Fallberg, photographed by Tomas Falmer, understands that intimacy can come from stillness rather than performance. Set in a bedroom like environment and captured through natural light, the series embraces seclusion as both a mood and a message. Nothing feels staged for effect. Instead, the images unfold slowly, like moments you were not supposed to witness but somehow did.
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Hanne Gaby Odiele by photographer Vanmossevelde
This nighttime shoot featuring Hanne Gaby Odiele leans into mood, attitude, and quiet rebellion. Shot by Vanmossevelde for N for Numéro Russia issue, the editorial feels adventurous without trying too hard. It captures the kind of glamour that only shows up after dark.
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Eternity
Eternity is a meditation on decay, beauty, and renewal. Anchored by Edvard Munch’s haunting words, this piece leans into the idea that death is not an ending but a transformation. It is quiet, reflective, and deeply poetic in its tone.
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Guardians by Andy Freeburg
There is something quietly powerful about Andy Freeburg’s Guardians. At first glance, the series feels understated. Almost static. Women sit or stand in Russian art museums, positioned beside famous paintings and sculptures. They are not models. They are not performers. They are guards. Their job is to watch, protect, and remain unnoticed. Freeburg flips that dynamic completely.
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Sweets Portraits by Photographer James Ostrer
Photographer James Ostrer documents our obsession with sugar in a series of grotesque real life portraits of people covered in layers of sweets and junk food. Speaking largely on the to the global food production and increasingly dangerous methods of mass production, Ostrer’s photographs conjure tribal images that are both fascinating and repulsive. Via the press release, “This adornment becomes a mask of what we eat which then becomes entwined with a hyper-pop sensibility and an obsequious inquiry into the great volumes of sugar that flow through our bodies.”
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Identities by Can Dagarslani
Photographer Can Dagaslani’s series Identities captures a quiet, contemplative exploration of self and relational identity. The Berlin-based shoot features models Sophie Bogdan and Marlene Pina, who appear almost like sisters, though their connection extends beyond genetics. Through subtle gestures, mirrored poses, and shared glances, Dagaslani examines how personal identity can both merge and diverge when experienced alongside someone else. Each photograph feels intimate, inviting viewers to question how identity is constructed, perceived, and performed.
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Photography by Emily Blincoe shows Hues of Cool
Emily Blincoe’s photography operates at the intersection of color theory, order, and quiet obsession. At first glance, her images feel calm and pleasing, almost meditative. However, the longer you look, the more deliberate and rigorous the work becomes. Blincoe does not simply photograph objects. She organizes them, dissects them, and rebuilds them through color. As a result, each image feels both scientific and playful at the same time.
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‘Central Nervous System’ by Wolfgang Tillmans
“Making a portrait is a fundamental artistic act and the process of it is a very direct human exchange. The dynamics of vulnerability, exposure, embarrassment and honesty do not change, ever. I’ve found that portraiture is a good leveling instrument for me and it always sends me back to square one.” Wolgang Tillmans, ‘Central Nervous System’
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Maleficent by Elizaveta Porodina
Photographer Elizaveta Porodina brings a vibrant, cinematic vision to life with her editorial titled Maleficent. The series reimagines one of our favorite childhood villains through a lens of contemporary fashion and high-concept styling.
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A Period of Juvenile Prosperity by Mike Brodie
By the age of 18, photographer Mike Brodie had already set out on a life defined by movement, curiosity, and adventure. In his photobook A Period of Juvenile Prosperity, Brodie documents his travels across the United States, capturing a fleeting moment in time when youth, freedom, and risk collide. He navigates the country primarily by hopping freight trains, a method of travel that allows him to encounter people and places far removed from conventional society.