s-magazine.photography - Digital features









Search Preview

Digital Features

s-magazine.photography
Latest highlights in international beauty and fashion photography. Remarkable images, unpredictable formats and extraordinary perspectives.
.photography > s-magazine.photography

SEO audit: Content analysis

Language Error! No language localisation is found.
Title Digital Features
Text / HTML ratio 31 %
Frame Excellent! The website does not use iFrame solutions.
Flash Excellent! The website does not have any flash contents.
Keywords cloud Show Feature photographer fashion series model story Christian stylist beauty photography Magazine white black Michael German Florian Brix models
Keywords consistency
Keyword Content Title Description Headings
Show 82
Feature 82
photographer 35
28
fashion 23
series 23
Headings
H1 H2 H3 H4 H5 H6
3 0 0 0 0 0
Images We found 87 images on this web page.

SEO Keywords (Single)

Keyword Occurrence Density
Show 82 4.10 %
Feature 82 4.10 %
photographer 35 1.75 %
28 1.40 %
fashion 23 1.15 %
series 23 1.15 %
model 22 1.10 %
story 21 1.05 %
Christian 13 0.65 %
stylist 13 0.65 %
beauty 12 0.60 %
photography 12 0.60 %
Magazine 12 0.60 %
white 12 0.60 %
black 11 0.55 %
Michael 10 0.50 %
German 10 0.50 %
Florian 10 0.50 %
Brix 9 0.45 %
models 9 0.45 %

SEO Keywords (Two Word)

Keyword Occurrence Density
Show Feature 82 4.10 %
of the 22 1.10 %
of a 14 0.70 %
to the 14 0.70 %
by the 13 0.65 %
in the 13 0.65 %
with the 12 0.60 %
in a 11 0.55 %
and white 11 0.55 %
black and 11 0.55 %
Aglaja Brix 9 0.45 %
with a 9 0.45 %
Florian Maas 8 0.40 %
German photographer 8 0.40 %
S Magazine 7 0.35 %
is a 7 0.35 %
Tristan Rösler 7 0.35 %
Rui Faria 7 0.35 %
on the 7 0.35 %
for the 6 0.30 %

SEO Keywords (Three Word)

Keyword Occurrence Density Possible Spam
black and white 11 0.55 % No
Aglaja Brix Florian 6 0.30 % No
Brix Florian Maas 6 0.30 % No
Show Feature A 5 0.25 % No
the role of 5 0.25 % No
Michał Massa Mąsior 5 0.25 % No
Show Feature The 5 0.25 % No
photography Show Feature 4 0.20 % No
your email address 3 0.15 % No
look Show Feature 3 0.15 % No
Brix and Florian 3 0.15 % No
Aglaja Brix and 3 0.15 % No
the theme of 3 0.15 % No
looks by stylist 3 0.15 % No
the inspiration for 3 0.15 % No
was the inspiration 3 0.15 % No
the stage for 3 0.15 % No
Inspired by the 3 0.15 % No
role of a 3 0.15 % No
Magazine Show Feature 3 0.15 % No

SEO Keywords (Four Word)

Keyword Occurrence Density Possible Spam
Aglaja Brix Florian Maas 6 0.30 % No
S Magazine Show Feature 3 0.15 % No
the role of a 3 0.15 % No
was the inspiration for 3 0.15 % No
Aglaja Brix and Florian 3 0.15 % No
the S Magazine Show 3 0.15 % No
for the S Magazine 3 0.15 % No
The basis for this 2 0.10 % No
is a homage to 2 0.10 % No
your email address in 2 0.10 % No
newsletters The basis for 2 0.10 % No
Brix and Florian Maas 2 0.10 % No
as a backdrop for 2 0.10 % No
About Privacy policy Imprint 2 0.10 % No
with a mixture of 2 0.10 % No
black and white and 2 0.10 % No
classic black and white 2 0.10 % No
into the role of 2 0.10 % No
playing the role of 2 0.10 % No
Queen of All My 2 0.10 % No

S-magazine.photography Spined HTML


Digital Features OUR WEBSITES DE / EN Leica photography – the big picture since 1949Discover LFI Magazine The Magazine for Leica M PhotographyDiscover M Magazine The Art ofMalleatePhotographyDiscover S Magazine DE / EN WWW.S-MAGAZINE.PHOTOGRAPHY Home Digital Features Print Editions Editorials & Ads Videos Photographers News Apps NewsletterWell-nighPrivacy policy Imprint WWW.S-MAGAZINE.PHOTOGRAPHY Tom MunroMax MalatestaAnton CorbijnAdam QuesadaIsabella LombardiniJiaxi & ZheRuben TomasSteffen HofemannVassilis PitoulisJordan LeeLuke & NikAndrea MeteDaniella MidengeMichael DonovanJörg SchiefereckeDavid AbrahamsJacob + CarrolJoseph ChenTom HoopsVerena Heller-GhanbarPatrick MerothSarah StorchRam Shergill Cate UnderwoodBen WellerChristian WernerJanina FleckhausDanillo Turilli Jana CruderOliver BeckmannElizaveta PorodinaEsther HaaseGeorge HolzLoreen HinzAntonio ParedesBil BrownJohann ClausenMynxii WhiteArmin WeisheitBenjamin KaufmannJesús AlonsoMichael GroegerLuc CoiffaitArved Colvin-SmithDirk BaderCharlie GrayChristian RinkeNatalya NovaJulie NagelEmma HartvigMarc KrauseYves KortumMonica MenezMichael Philipp BaderTina TrumppAglaja Brix & Florian MaasJennifer EndomRamsey SpencerRobert WunschRui FariaReno MezgerJessica BarthelPatrice BryllaTimothy SchaumburgCedric BihrMichał Massa MąsiorJames ButlerCaesar LimaCharlie GatesMikael WardhanaJames MeakinChristian HertelTrisha WardMike TinneyNicolo TerraneoEva PentelLuke FreemanNeil Francis DawsonChristoph MusiolLiam WarwickLorenzo DalboscoEnrique BadulescuAnna DakiBenjamin TietgeSvenja PitzChristian GeisselmannJanina AlffJohannes KuczeraTakahito SasakiUrsuAlex LambrechtsEllen von UnwerthRodrigo PalmaTristan RöslerHector PerezTill JanzMurray CloseJames LawChristian BendelMarie HochhausHendrik SchneiderJulia KieckseeJimmy DonelanAlex Lee JohnsonLarry GormanSylwana Zybura / Studio PeripetieMax MontgomeryWayne JohnsNadine ElfenbeinSaga SigIlona SzwarcMarkus Kloiber Marc SchuhmannSabine LiewaldFrancesco CarrozziniFlorian GrillBruce GildenRené & RadkaThomas SchweigertChad & Paul Morgan MillerTill Janz & Hendrik SchneiderFrank P. WartenbergSebastian MaderPhilipp RathmerTobias SchultYork HovestPatrick HouiMichael DonathJuliane SpaeteJonas LindstroemPeter HeckSaima AltunkayaPeter LangerRalph MeckeClaudia GrasslRankinDaemian Smith & Christine SuarezPetrovsky & RamoneAdrian CrispinPhilippe VogelenzangAmos FrickeCoco NeuvilleKirchknopf & GrambowJenny & LeeRonald DickMarkus TedeskinoStefan MilevMathias BothorOlaf HeineBernd OpitzBjørn OpsahlMarcus GaabOliver SchwarzwaldJ. Konrad SchmidtRené StaudUlrich Lindenthal-LazharPedro FerreiraPhilip BruederlePer ZennströmRobert GrischekManuel PandalisKai StuhtJonathan MannionJohn WrightJoachim BaldaufDaniel JosefsohnChiun-Kai Shih WWW.S-MAGAZINE.PHOTOGRAPHY Almost washed-up We will shortly send you an email to personize your subscription. WWW.S-MAGAZINE.PHOTOGRAPHY Welcome We respect your privacy and will never pass your details on to a third party. You can cancel your subscription at any time. Digital Features MENU Creative LeadPublished newspaper the Digital Features are showcasing selected photographers, presenting a fresh S Magazine sectional in which the versifier has the well-constructed creative lead to express what he stands for – all entirely shot on Leica S or Leica SL. Fishing Johann Clausen Still-life photographer Joahnn Clausen is constantly exploring everyday objects. At times abstract, at times eccentric or humorous, he uses his lens to lend them a new dimension and stimulating look. In his Fishing series, the focus is on fishing hooks, which he stages in new and inspiring ways. ShowFull-lengthHunky Dory Antonio Paredes Inspired, of course, by David Bowie’s tome of the same title, Antonio Paredes’s ‘Hunky Dory’ is a homage to the seventies, with a touch of Andy Warhol in the Pop Art portraits, and a unique squint produced by the specific use of unsharpness. ShowFull-lengthChromaticity Arved Colvin-Smith In his Chromaticity eyeful series, Arved Colvin-Smith delights the viewers with unusual chromatic variations. Makeup versifier Andrew Gallimore put the colour palette together, inspired by technical errors in wrenched RGB files. ShowFull-lengthA Woman of Hollywood Isabella Lombardini The very successful and well-known merchantry woman, Alana Hadid, is living her dream in Hollywood. In ‘A Woman of Hollywood’, Isabella Lombardini uses subtle monochrome to stage an pure series featuring Hadid. Show FeatureSquatterGame Michael Donovan In ‘Face Game’, Michael Donovan is playing with satirical elements, exposing social dissonance in a uniquely unconventional and provocative manner, which is typical for his photography. ShowFull-lengthLeisure Alex Lambrechts Picnics and bikinis at Lake Hallwil in Switzerland, terminology to the cadre and convincingly retro – Alex Lambrecht’s ‘Leisure’ is a refined example of a modern, vintage look. ShowFull-lengthMylar Bil Brown Inspired by Ira Cohen’s ‘The Mylar Chamber’ from the sixties, Bil Brown photographed dozens of models for ‘Mylar’, his reinterpretation of the work. Creating surprising and psychedelic deformations and metamorphoses, Brown’s series is a homage to the original artist. ShowFull-lengthOff Season Aglaja Brix & Florian Maas In March this year, Aglaja Brix and Florian Maas were inspired by the eyeful of the sparse landscape of the volcanic island of Lanzarote, which resulted in the multi-faceted road trip story ‘Off Season’. The styles they used from the slow malleate collections, fit the subject like a glove. Off season double pack. ShowFull-lengthThe Truth Andrea Mete Women and sexuality eyeful are Andrea Mete’s preferred subjects. He applies an experimental approach, where he combines suggestive snapshots with very staged elements. In ‘The Truth’ he lives out this passion with Japanese flair, and with Misaki, whom he met by chance. ShowFull-lengthMosh Ruben Tomas For his ‘Mosh’ editorial series, photographer Ruben Tomas staged volitional model and travesty performer, Mosh, at a tony swimming pool in Mulholland Drive. Rather than his usual woebegone and white, Tomas photographed the expressive and provocative pin ups using strong colour. ShowFull-lengthUrbanistas Verena Heller-Ghanbar Derelict industrial complexes are the setting for ‘Urbanistas’ by Verena Heller-Ghanbar – melancholic enchantment meets sorrow. ShowFull-lengthDreamscapes Vassilis Pitoulis ‘Dreamscapes’ is erotic photography à la Vassilis Pitoulis. Together with his muse, Valeria Vasilenko, he celebrates archetype woebegone and white. A homage to femininity, spiced up with a unrepealable touch of irony. ShowFull-lengthMotion Blur Benjamin Kaufmann Trendy glitter dominates ‘Motion Blur’ by Benjamin Kaufmann – flowing movements and constructive lighting lend Flora Carter’s squatter a colourful and enchanting aura. ShowFull-lengthPlanet Mars Michael Groeger For Michael Groeger, the spectacular, reddish dunes and cliff landscapes of Namibia offered the perfect setting for designs by Marina Hoermanseder to have the most impact. In ‘Planet Mars’, tight corsages with buckle features present a deliberate, restricting unrelatedness to the uncounted self-rule of nature. ShowFull-lengthSnow White and Rose Red Robert Wunsch ‘Snow White & Rose Red’, is a minimalist studio project with two lovely women. Robert Wunsch combines flowing materials and natural make-up to create a harmonious, beautifully-composed and powerful whole. ShowFull-lengthA New Tone of Its Own Yves Kortum With every photo shoot Yves Kortum rediscovers the unique features and facets of women. His woebegone and white images present the stronger sex – as he himself calls women – as tough, unearthly, seductive and, at times, vulnerable. In ‘A New Tone of its Own’, he brings us irresistible muses in the twilight magic of Paris by night. ShowFull-lengthDrop DeadEyefulJörg Schieferecke Nick Cave and Kylie Minogue’s song ‘Where The Wild Roses Grow’ was the source of inspiration for Jörg Schieferecke’s ‘Drop Dead Beauty’. Complex and experimental sets – including a corpse in the water – create the scenery for a mysterious, moonlit eyeful series full of refined and flawless aesthetics. ShowFull-lengthTime-Out David Abrahams Inspired by the surrealist movement of the 1920s and 30s, David Abrahams imbued his series 'Time Out' with minimalist philosophy and an accent on utopian depictions of the human form – complemented by the timeless elegance created by stylist Marina German. ShowFull-lengthParis, Paris… Alex Lambrechts With ‘Paris, Paris…’, Alex Lambrechts reveals his photographic preference – elegant woebegone and white with a focus on the details, a melange of elements from street photography, dynamic street fashion, and an impressive use of light and shadow. ShowFull-lengthUnderwater Love Marie Hochhaus For ‘Underwater Love’, Marie Hochhaus immersed herself in the watery element. Working with Paparazzi model Soeki Gravenhorst, she produced an impressive and melancholic series with artistically interesting and unusual perspectives. ShowFull-lengthGods and Monsters Joseph Chen In ‘Gods & Monsters’, Joseph Chen tells a post-apocalyptic tale where survivors and over-large, mutated creatures come together on a remote island, merging into a sci-fi megacosm with a unshared signature and visionary message. ShowFull-lengthSimulacrum Mynxii White In ‘Simulacrum’, Mynxii White tells the story of a stuff x-rated in space, who decides to clone itself to escape loneliness. The models Ava McAvoy and Ema McKie slipped into the respective roles, while stylist Douglas VanLaningham made sure the looks fit to the story. ShowFull-lengthChinpira Tom Hoops Fascinated by the Japanese Mafia, Tom Hoops created 'Chinpira’, an impressively authentic-looking story in woebegone and white – Kendo, does a very inveigling job at playing the role of a striking young Yakuza. ShowFull-lengthThe Secret Garden Patrick Meroth Mystical and romantic, Patrick Meroth‘s The Secret Garden takes the viewer into a secret and mysterious world. With airy, light styling by Bernadette Prechtl, garden nymph Emilia Lampe gives expression to the photographer’s inspiration. ShowFull-lengthPalazzo Sarah Storch In ‘Palazzo’, Sarah Storch plays virtually with the pirate theme. At the historic Saal de Pologne in Leipzig, she staged model Pia in eccentric, rebellious looks by stylist Lisa Filippini. ShowFull-lengthGoldmine Ram Shergill The landscape of southern Spain served as a scenery for Ram Shergill’s ‘Goldmine’, capturing exalted, anthropomorphic-zoomorphic impressions in exuberant designs by Jack Irving. ShowFull-lengthLucky Hobo Jana Cruder With ‘Lucky Hobo’, Jana Cruder produced a nostalgic, vintage story where Clinton Van Arnam, with a very personal attitude, steps into the world of trains and locomotives in search of his own, real identity. ShowFull-lengthFragile Nature Janina Fleckhaus In “Fragile Nature”, Janina Fleckhaus explores the theme of transience, creating a secretive, melancholic dream world with picturesque still-lifes, landscapes and portraits. ShowFull-lengthCross Walk Christian Geisselmann In Christian Geisselmann’s latest story, ‘Cross Walk’, a mysterious girl roams the streets and sidewalks of Greenpoint, which he has captured in a muted, sombre colour palette overdue a light New York haze. Her visitation is tomboyish, a little Gothic, and sometimes subconscious overdue glasses or under a large, floppy hat. She’s true to herself, and nobody else. ShowFull-lengthDevil’sFlitAglaja Brix & Florian Maas Aglaja Brix and Florian Maas’s new story, ‘Devil’s Dance’, stars a model named Natalie and take us into the studio for an wits that is hallucinatory, sexy-futuristic and a little unsettling – Natalie glows in variegated colours, casts unusual shadows, and plane dissolves and solarises virtually the edges. ShowFull-lengthDeconstruction Christian Rinke Christian Rinke is a resider of the world. He was born in Germany, grew up in Peru, has lived in Hamburg, Berlin, London and New York, and is well-nigh to take his victual daughter when to Peru to reconnect with nature. For ‘Deconstruction’ he teamed up with the stylist with the weightier vintage hodgepodge in Brooklyn, Ali of A Noble Savage, to find some eyeful in a waffly America. ShowFull-lengthBauhaus Benjamin Tietge Circles, triangles and squares, the vital elements of the Bauhaus movement of the twenties, form the creative framework for Benjamin Tietge’s ‘Bauhaus’ series – the lighting and the static poses taken by model Dasha, establish a reference to the expressionist and experimental films of the era. ShowFull-lengthA Night with Sir Nikolai Danillo Turilli Influenced by the sensual flair of the Italian talkie of the fifties (‘La Dolce Vita’) and Helmut Newton’s staging of feminine eroticism, Danillo Turilli’s ‘A Night with Sir Nikolai’ captures timeless woebegone and white images of model Katrin Tonn wearing traffic-stopping lingerie by Opaak, Wolford, Eres and Beate Uhse. Anna Fried and Julia Kunstmann were in tuition of the styling. ShowFull-lengthOff-Road James Meakin James Meakin created his full-length ‘Off-Road’ in South Africa. Shot in a reportage style, the series is a tousle of spontaneous moments, urban street scenes and opulent landscapes. In images reminiscent of a modern road movie, model Charme Husselmann skilfully channels the weft of a young vagabond with a mixture of melancholy and joie-de-vivre. ShowFull-lengthSpectral Julie Nagel For ‘Spectral’, Julie Nagel used prisms, soap frothing and crystals to create kaleidoscope and rainbow effects, and combined them with soft, pastel colours. With her red hair and pearly, white complexion, model Laura Mertens is the perfect match for Nagel’s magical, fantasy world. ShowFull-lengthSolarisation Enrique Badulescu The gorgeous beaches of Tulum, Mexico, were the setting for Enrique Badulescu’s ‘Solarisation’, an amazingly intense, surreal-psychedelic riot of colour, where he orchestrates modern and fresh looks by stylist Romina Herrera Malatesta portrayed by top model Caroline Kelley. ShowFull-lengthColour Explosion Arved Colvin-Smith For his ‘Colour Explosion’ creative story, Arved Colvin-Smith turned unblemished faces into canvasses, highlighting make-up versifier Linda Öhrström’s impressive experiments in colour and form. ShowFull-lengthDon’t vituperation me for… Joachim Baldauf For ‘Don’t vituperation me for…’, Berlin photographer, Joachim Baldauf, staged the eyeful of his models – who differ from the worldwide stereotypes – in a markedly spartan setting, producing an insightful and impressive photo series full of surprising and valuable details, that underline Baldauf’s photographic accomplishments. ShowFull-lengthRe-Model Elizaveta Porodina With ‘Re-Model’, the Munich photographer, Elizaveta Porodina, has created an emotional story surrounding the model Veronika Rusakova – a very experimental sonnet that deals with the various phases of growing up. ShowFull-lengthJe t’aime Esther Haase “Je t’aime ... moi non plus“ by Serge Gainsbourg and Jane Birkin was the source of inspiration for Esther Haase’s photographic and cinematic interpretation of the theme. A splendid, former Largerfeld, villa in Hamburg served as a scenery for the series and the mucosa – a love story with Isabelle Surmont and Harald Nicolas Stazol, told in timeless, archetype woebegone and white, and with a squint and flair of the sixties. ShowFull-lengthNorður Benjamin Kaufmann Fascinated by the nature, landscapes and breath-taking light found in the northern reaches of the planet, Benjamin Kaufmann produced ‘Norður’, an unusual combination of upper fashion, eyeful and Icelandic panoramas. Raw motifs taken from Nordic nature find visual counterparts in abstractly-futuristic fashion, make-up and hair-styling productions. ShowFull-lengthWeimar Los Angeles Bil Brown Weimar Los Angeles is a story well-nigh wild nights in today’s Los Angeles, respective in its own way to the blossoming, colorful and decadent lifestyle of Berlin in the twenties and early thirties. An exciting, woebegone and white malleate editorial by American photographer, Bill Brown. ShowFull-lengthDeformation Loreen Hinz Loreen Hinz’s photographic work deals with the platonic body. In Deformation, she twists, distorts and deforms that which is perfect. Wearing designs by Tata Christiane and Niels Gundtoft Hansen, model Joe Jungbluth at times takes on the role of an Italian Madonna, at times of a Dali-esque interpretation. ShowFull-lengthBello Monica Menez In her latest malleate film, ‘Bello’, Monica Menez tells a frivolous and catty story well-nigh a archetype love triangle, where a housemaid takes revenge on her employer. A mucosa full of unconvincing situational spectacle and surprising flit elements. The twin photo series expands on the story with remoter spicy aspects revolving virtually the troublemaking web of relationships. ShowFull-lengthHanami Antonio Paredes Inspired by Hanami, the Japanese cherry floweret festival triumphal the floweret that fades yonder without a unenduring moment of incredible beauty, Antonio Paredes’s softly voiceless photo series stages model Anabel playing the role of a fragile western Geisha. Stylist Jeanne Dekonink does a sunny job subtracting modern and floral details. ShowFull-lengthCity Lights Max Montgomery In ‘City Lights’, photographer Max Montgomery stages model Elyes Taylor in extravagant-lascivious looks by stylist Irene Albright – an outing into New York City’s neon-permeated night-life. ShowFull-lengthIt’s Strange Tristan Rösler In ‘It’s Strange’, Tristan Rösler stages a ‘love story’ theme in the style of a road movie with two women. Stylist Heike Held is responsible for the easy-going squint of the models, Luca Aimee und Olivia Leonarda. ShowFull-lengthThe Queen of All My Dreams Rui Faria London photographer Rui Faria features model Marta del Caño in “The Queen of All My Dreams”, a mysterious story well-nigh a young widow commemorating the loss of her older husband without a rather short marriage. The woebegone and white looks by malleate editor Katie Felstead do a clever job of orchestrating the unconvincing field of tension between wedding and funeral. ShowFull-lengthI want to believe Aglaja Brix & Florian Maas In ‘I want to believe’, Aglaja Brix and Florian Maas use every kind of genre – from eyeful to street photography. Shot in New York, this resulted in a dynamic story full of heady perspectives, which plays with contrasting, glitzy eyeful images with something of a hush-up look. ShowFull-lengthWide-Angle Michał Massa Mąsior Inspired by the opulent shapes and speckled patterns of the ‘Flashbacks’ hodgepodge by malleate designer Anna Załucka-Kuczera, Michał Massa Mąsior created a dynamic-urban series where he plays with everything from American portrait genre to wide-angle shots in a inside perspective. ShowFull-lengthShades of Sensuality Tina Trumpp In ‘Shades of Sensuality’, the German photographer Tina Trumpp gives form to sexuality nudes. Natural light and soft contours create a very unique, soft-hued and sensual image of women. ShowFull-lengthAfter Christian Rinke Christian Rinke approaches the theme of eyeful from a very variegated perspective. ‘After’ reveals what remains pursuit a night of wild partying. Stylist Fernando Torres was in tuition of finding the right squint with top brands such as House of Holland, Topshop Unique, Burberry Brit, and Ashish, among others. ShowFull-lengthA Celebration of Man Reno Mezger For “A Celebration of Man”, Reno Mezger and Art Director, Uta von Fintel, focussed on male nudes. For the professional models involved in the production, it was not well-nigh taking on a role, but rather well-nigh expressing their personalities by interacting with the photographer. ShowFull-lengthChambre Nº 12 Anna Daki Her visual sense for physical forms never fails her: in collaboration with stylist Sheina Miretskaya, photographer Anna Daki’s unique and mysterious imagery shaped model Diana for ‘Chambre Nº 12’ for the S Magazine. ShowFull-lengthBorn 10.0 Julie Nagel German photographer Julie Nagel chose a run-down, industrial site as a location for her testatory ‘Born 10.0’ story. With his unusual squint – a combination of a fighter’s disposition and a unrepealable vulnerability – model David Balheim personalises the platonic of survival in this setting. ShowFull-lengthA Touch of Newton Yves Kortum Fascinated by strong, self-confident, yet sensual women, Luxembourg photographer Yves Kortum’s series ‘A Touch of Newton’ presents pictures full of cliché-like, dramatically exaggerated femininity. A trendy encounter with the unconfined master – successfully interpreted by Kortum in his own, unique manner. ShowFull-lengthTussie-Mussies René & Radka Floriography, that flourished in Victorian England, is the cryptological liaison of secret messages by ways of flower arrangements, and was the inspiration for ‘Tussie-Mussies’, a series where the Los Angeles photographer duo Rene & Radka create pictures of children set in floral compositions. It is the spin-off of a long-term art project and hopes to culminate in an exhibition and a photo book. ShowFull-lengthVölur Rui Faria In ‘Völur’, the Portuguese photographer Rui Faria plays with his image of the platonic woman: strong, self-confident and resolute, while moreover having an implicit soft, feminine and erotic side. He chose a Viking sexuality warrior as the heroine for his models, Benthe de Vries and Elsa Brisinger, to emulate. ShowFull-lengthRawEyefulJames Meakin British photographer James Meakin’s ‘Raw Beauty’ series presents up-and-coming model Jena Goldsack on the craggy coastline of her home county of Cornwall – a uniquely magical combination of two Celtic beauties. ShowFull-lengthSleepless Tristan Rösler Their preference for nineties malleate is unmistakable: for ‘Sleepless’, photographer Tristan Rösler and stylist Cornelia Nicoli made good use of Cape Town's unique lighting to create a graphic-urban sports and lifestyle story. ShowFull-lengthCatch a Tiger by the Toe Marie Hochhaus Hamburg photographer Marie Hochhaus tends to work on stories revolving virtually young girls. It was a particular location that was the inspiration for her ‘Catch a Tiger by the Toe’ story. Model Charlotte slipped perfectly into the role of a young woman who lives isolated from society, in a world of her own megacosm with its own particular rules. ShowFull-lengthTemporary Wardrobe Monica Menez In both her photography and her malleate films, Monica Menez knows how to combine the grotesque and the humorous in a graphic style that is both powerful and original. “Women” are unchangingly inside to the motif. Their power is moreover very recognisable in the interplay of malleate and traps in Temporary Wardrobe -  even though on this occasion the focus is only indirectly on the woman. ShowFull-lengthRun the Dune Michael Philipp Bader German photographer Michael Philipp Bader found the perfect location in Denmark for his ‘Run the Dune’ photo spread. He chose models Iréne Amuquandoh and Suri North very specifically considering of their contrasting skin types. The outcome was an interesting mix of sports, malleate and portrait photography. ShowFull-lengthDon’t Care Aglaja Brix & Florian Maas The surreal and testatory undercurrent of a neglected yard was the inspiration for “Don’t Care”, a series by the German photographer duo Aglaja Brix & Florian Maas. For the photo shot, model and singer Anna-Maria Nemetz slipped into the role of untamed vagabond, emphasized by stylist Fabiana Vardaro’s rebel look. ShowFull-lengthHighThoroughbredPressure Enrique Badulescu For “HighThoroughbredPressure”, renowned Mexican photographer Enrique Badulescu worked with artists Vicky Steckel and Ward Stegerhoek, as well as model Alejandra Guilmant. Their efforts resulted in heady body-painting creations – an explosion of colours that explore the boundaries between art, photography and body, and rationalization upper thoroughbred pressure. ShowFull-lengthVerbalism Jennifer Endom In “Verbalism”, German photographer Jennifer Endom – with the support of model, Charlotte Kay, and stylist, Julia Quante – looks for the wastefulness between feminine strength and the fragility of the sexuality character. Warm and tomfool colour contrasts, loftiness and proximity, and opposing materials, all serve as stylistic ways to unzip this end. A conscious nomination for a increasingly intimate malleate photography. ShowFull-lengthBerlin Portfolio Joachim Baldauf For his “Berlin Portfolio”, German photographer Joachim Baldauf created a real relationship between his protagonist couples and the locations, giving the images a fascinating, time-transcending energy. ShowFull-lengthStrangers Julia Kiecksee Empty alleyways, gloomy street corners, and run-down backyards in London are the stage for German photographer Julia Kiecksee’s ‘Strangers’ series, where she gives the models room to play, combining the pressure of their glamorous industry with a what-the-shit attitude. London stylist Alton Hetariki gets the right squint together, with a mixture of luxury and second-hand fashion. ShowFull-lengthChanges of Hue Rui Faria The yearning for spring and summer, a new, fresh, colourful season, a renewal of life, of hope and energy: that was the train of thought of eyeful photographer Rui Faria, when he created ‘Changes of Hue’, exclusively for the S Magazine. ShowFull-lengthBoyhood Michał Massa Mąsior In “Boyhood” polish photographer Michał Massa Mąsior contrasts the youthful strength of male model Rostsislav Tomylin in an interesting dichotomy with his hometown Cracow, in which a strongly figurative tradition seemingly can’t alimony pace with its own surprising metamorphoses. ShowFull-lengthRendez-vous Parisiens Coco Neuville In her “Rendez-vous Parisiens” story, French malleate photographer Coco Neuville mixes stylistic elements of malleate and reportage photography. In her documentation, she stages Parisian sexuality artists without waffly the individuality of these unusual personalities. ShowFull-lengthDisparate Youth Tristan Rösler German photographer Tristan Rösler used the urban backdrops of Hamburg and Berlin for his pure and expressive malleate story “Disparate Youth”. The focus is on a youth culture style that is reminiscent of Larry Clark’s film, Kids. ShowFull-lengthOf the Field Mike Tinney Touching on Shakespeare’s drama “Henry VIII”, British photographer Mike Tinney staged the poetic Of the Field series of stills. It shows gorgeous flowers that have once passed their zenith. Tinney looks to capture these moments and reflects on the fugacity of existence. ShowFull-lengthThe 4th Ward Neil Francis Dawson “Fourth Ward” is the original name for New York City’s “Two Bridges” district, that has yet to be invaded by hipsters. With its magnificent but run-down 19th century buildings, it exudes the perfect kind of morbid flair that Neil Francis was hoping to find for his story. This is where he put model Alexandra Hochguertel in the spot-light for a reportage-like malleate spread. ShowFull-lengthNaked City Hector Perez In Naked City, the Spanish photographer Hector Perez presents sensual human persons in unrelatedness to stern architecture. The resulting images are a combination of intense dynamics and minimalistic aesthetics. ShowFull-lengthSculptural Couture Mikael WardhanaVersifierand couturiere Yi Qing Yin says that the creative process is only perfect if she succeeds in evoking the soul of a garment. The one-of-a-kind designer contrasts sumptuous armour with fragile and zappy structures. In collaboration with Yi Qing, the Australian photographer Mikael Wardhana set the stage in Paris for his visionary interpretations of her motto exclusively for the S Magazine. ShowFull-lengthThe Gang Christian Geisselmann Run lanugo districts in Brooklyn are the scenery for The Gang, a series in which Parisian photographer Christian Geisselmann sets the stage for rebellious and striking sexuality characters. Using faded colours and grainy landscape format, the photographer achieves a movie squint inspired by the imagery of Bruce Davidson. ShowFull-lengthKörperbau Anna Daki In her Körperbau, the young Ukrainian photographer, Anna Daki, combines the sensuality of the human soul with the objectivity of architecture. The models, who have a deliberately natural style, prefer weedy poses reflecting architectural structures and lines. Thanks to the rich unrelatedness of woebegone and white, the imagery gives rise to a bionic interplay of construction and biology. ShowFull-lengthFiction Takahito Sasaki With Fiction, Takahito Sasaki has created a full-length that explores minimal abstractness in a playful interaction of unrelatedness and continuity. The unusually wide, portrait format, together with the unconfined malleate styling by Marina German, captures a story-telling undercurrent in a cinematic approach. ShowFull-lengthRobot Julia Kiecksee Inspired by the Sci-Fi thriller Ex-Machina, photographer Julia Kiecksee's Robot series uses contrast-rich, woebegone and white and powerful colour pictures, with futuristic, metallic-looking creations by stylist Alton Hetariki, to produce concepts based on the theme of Artificial Intelligence. ShowFull-lengthBright Christoph Musiol In a masculine dialogue between malleate and architecture, Christoph Musiol transforms three-dimensional spaces into two-dimensional compositions. Working with labels such as Brioni, Dolce&Gabbana, Louis Vuitton, and Ermenegildo Zegna, stylist Bodo Ernle creates a fashionable counter pole. ShowFull-lengthSomething Cloudy Max Montgomery During a photo shoot with the new Leica S at the Hamptons, British malleate photographer Max Montgomery set the stage for trendy Bohemian chic, using a diversity of photographic styles – from extreme, emotional close-ups to archetype malleate photography. ShowFull-lengthKEEP UP WITH THE NEWS If you like staying well-informed of the latest digital features, videos, ad campaigns and exhibitions, subscribe to our newsletter defended to malleate and fine-art photography. You can subscribe to our newsletter by ticking the towardly box when creating a user worth or by inward your e-mail write in the provided input mask. You can indicate your name voluntarily. We use it only to write you personally. You will then receive an will-less confirmation e-mail containing a link to the specified address. The registration process is not well-constructed until you click on this link. By giving your consent to receiving our newsletter, we use your e-mail write to send you razzmatazz and interesting offers well-nigh our own goods and services and those of partner companies. The data will not be passed on to third parties. You can withdraw your consent to receive newsletters at any time by objecting to the receipt of newsletters. The understructure for this form of data processing is your consent. If we have placid your e-mail write in connection with the use of our offers (e.g. when purchasing our goods or services, or when creating a self-ruling user account), we may moreover send you e-mail newsletters for our offers without your prior consent, which are similar to the goods or services you have once ordered from us, if you have not objected to receiving such newsletters. The understructure for this is Section 7 (3) UWG. You can object to receiving any type of newsletters from us at any time without incurring any financing other than the transmission financing equal to the vital rates (e.g. the financing of your Internet provider). We will inform you well-nigh the right of objection when collecting the email write and in the respective newsletter. Contact LFI Photographie GmbH · Sprinkenhof · Springeltwiete 4 20095 Hamburg · Germany Phone: +49 40 2262112-80 · Fax: +49 40 2262112-70 info@lfi-online.de · www.lfi-online.de Our Websites LFI Magazine M Magazine S Magazine S MagazineWell-nighPrivacy policy ImprintIncreasinglyChannels Facebook Instagram Vimeo