25 Selected Photographers
Alida Turton — Australia / @the.nostalgiaseries
Amy Horowitz — United States / @dont_smile_nyc
Anders Jørgensen — Norway / @osloante
Arnab Sarkar — India / @clickz_n_momentz
Bjoern Maletz — Germany / @maletzphoto
Chris Yan — China / @chrisyan1981
Christian Diaz — Puerto Rico / @d86photos
Daniel Díaz de León — Mexico / @daniel_diazdeleon
Eagan Hsu — Taiwan / @ea9anhsu
Eduardo Scaramuzza — Norway / @urbaneyeswideopen
Fanja Hubers — Netherlands / @fanjahubers
Guillermo Capitas — Spain / @g_capitas
Jana Tischer — Germany / @januschinka
Julachart Pleansanit — Thailand / @longstreet_bob
Maria Guzman — Australia / @maria.filmphotography
Miguel Ángel Cabrera García — Spain / @macab_photo
Nathan Hinze — Scotland / @nathinze
Peng-Wen Lin — Canada / @pwlllin
Phatsakorn Bundasak — Thailand / @dave_street_photo
Priscilla Natasha — Netherlands / @priscilla_natasha
Roland de Courson — South Korea / @rdecourson
Stefanie Auer — Germany / @humanfotografie
Taichi Naitou — Japan / @num_street
Victor Manuel Alvarez Vicente — Spain / @vic_mavphoto
Yann Staffelbach — Switzerland / @yannstaffelbach
I appreciate how social media lets us discover and share countless images with a simple tap, but there’s a special excitement in holding a photograph in your hands. A printed image carries an intimacy and emotional depth that can spark a real personal connection. When you flip through a magazine or photo book, you’re not just looking—you’re taking in an artist’s vision on your own terms, privately, in your own space, with deep focus.
Then there’s the gallery or exhibition, where that personal bond becomes a shared experience. Conversations flow, curiosity grows, and ideas unfold in real time. Digital platforms still have their place, but by embracing both the calm focus of magazines and photo books, and the communal energy of exhibitions, we allow photography to move beyond the everyday and spark moments of genuine wonder.
— Tuomas Koskialho, DOCU Magazine Founder