Our Photography
When recruiting for responsible brands, there are lots of stories to tell; from diversity in the workplace, to sustainable strategies that are driving real change. From the human scale, to the planetary scale.
Each photo used on our website has been carefully selected from a vast range each depicting one of three areas:
People
Place
Planet
People are at the heart of our industry and the beating soul of our business. We have aimed to show people in their natural style, shot at work, at play or just in life and showing how beautifully diverse humans are.
Not all our Wander family are lucky enough to get close to nature every day. Showing Place in our photos is about experience context and scale, zooming out and creating stylised representations of the everyday (or not so everyday) places that life happens. You will often still see people within these images and they will all represent the vibrancy of varied life.
Responsible employees and employers care deeply about the impact their work and lives leave on our Planet. We are taking this chance take a wider view on some of the landscapes our world offers and on occasion also zoom in to see what nature in her wonderful texture and style has to offer up close.
As Wander grows so will our imagery. For us photography is the ultimate tool in capturing our surroundings; of documenting the impact we all have on our world and shaping the way we remember things.
We would like to give thanks to the following photographers for each photo on our site (in order of appearance):
Andreas Gucklhorn
Chase Fade
Jadon Calvert
Nonsap Visuals
Siviwe Kapteyn
Deddy Yoga Pratama
Brandon Hoogenboom
Kenny Luo
Ronaldo Santos
Craig Whitehead
Henry Be
Wolfgang Hasselmann
Annie Spratt
Tasos Mansour
Darya Jumelya
Ryoji Iwata
Alexandr Gross
Ben O’bro
Rathish Gandhi
Eugene
Gbrakz
Henrique Macedo
Ivan Bandura
David Clarke
Muhammad Raufan Yusup
Jayakody Anthanas
Rod Long
Victoriano Izquierdo
Yapo Zhou
And a final thanks plus credit to David Hieatt for constant inspiration and understanding of true purpose from his book Do Purpose.