Please enter your email and website or LinkedIn to receive more information about our free and paid accounts.
Thanks! We'll reply to you shortly.
Please enter your email address below and we’ll send you instructions on how to change your password.
Enter your new password below or generate one. The password should be at least ten characters long. To make it stronger, use upper and lower case letters, numbers, and symbols.
Black Voices from Big Brown came to life with Scott Areman’s help to honor over two dozen African American Executives and celebrate their legacy at UPS.
Will Crooks explores and expands his network of artists through his personal project exploring artists in their spaces. TOWN Magazine’s eye was caught and the rest is history.
Producer Bryan Sheffield and Designer Lindsay Thompson had the opportunity to share the best marketing practices with True Chicago, an organization that invests in the future and talent of young creatives.
Each week, Mexico City-based Walter Shintani has gone above and beyond to complete Wonderful Machine’s “Creative in Place” assignments, where we ask our members to send images related to a specific topic of them and/or their families around the house.
Every other week, Wonderful Machine’s Varun Raghupathi interviews a member photographer to discuss what they’ve been up to during quarantine. Rhode Island-based Josh Behan joins the program for week seven, discussing his recent personal project and how he’s balancing raising a young family with getting back into the swing of things.
Every other week, Wonderful Machine’s Varun Raghupathi interviews a member photographer to discuss what they’ve been up to during quarantine. Brooklyn-based Paul Quitoriano joins the program for week six, discussing the ongoing protests, his battle with COVID-19, and how he first got into food photography.
Spurred by the protests over the killing of George Floyd by police, we decided to focus this week’s open house on racial injustice in America and what it means for creatives.
Three WM photographers — Andrew Dolph, Chris Rogers, and Griffin Harrington — get shots of protestors marching for change across the country. From the Midwest, to the South, to the Northeast, people everywhere are upset with the lack of accountability for police officers and failure to protect the civil rights of African Americans.
Whenever architectural photographer Jason Keen lands work out of the country, he builds in time to explore with his camera. Check out some of the shots he’s created while on assignment in China and Vietnam
South Carolina-based Ian Curcio spends time documenting his five-year-old son, Enzo, as the entire family navigates the coronavirus quarantine together.
San Francisco-based Angela Decenzo gets imagery of classic cars and other rides for a Wall Street Journal series called “My Ride.” The writer, A.J. Baime, published a book of 100 cars and drivers last year and included five of Angela’s shoots in it.
When the COVID-19 lockdown cancelled Houston-based photographer Todd Spoth’s workshops for budding photographers, he had to find a new way to offer classes to interested students.
Freelancer Jon Morgan, whose sister is an educator at several non-profit dialysis clinics, gets imagery of the nurses who work there while asking about their fears at work.
Each week, Wonderful Machine’s Varun Raghupathi will interview a member photographer to discuss what they’ve been up to during quarantine. Week three brings Cleveland-based Angelo Merendino to the show. Angelo, a former musician, discusses his early career and what he’s been up to during the lockdown.
UK-based Aivaras Simonis takes advantage of quarantine to experiment with new retouching, lighting, and composition techniques for his minimalist images.
San Francisco-based Saroyan Humphrey dedicates much of his free time to filling his e-magazine “Trailblazer” with stories of racecar drivers, musicians, and artists from around the country.
New Englander Abigail Grey heads to New Mexico to get imagery across the state for The Magnolia Journal. Abigail coordinated the entire shoot and edited the final deliverables upon completion.
Milwaukee, Wisconsin-based Sara Stathas gets historic photographs of voters in Wisconsin, who were forced to cast their ballots in person on Tuesday, April 7.
Wonderful Machine is a network of photographers and producers who work on projects for publications, agencies, and brands around the world. Here are some of those stories.