Girls behind the camera vol.2

Photography has always been a natural part of our process—not just as a way of documenting, but as a way of feeling, remembering, and seeing.

In the project Girls of… Girls Behind the Camera, we turn our attention to the women behind the lens—those who shape how we perceive images, often remaining invisible themselves.

For this installment, we invited photographers whose work has accompanied our mood boards for years to share their vision and images with us.

This time we're meeting Magdalena Wosińska

a photographer based in Los Angeles whose work has been a source of inspiration for us for years. Her photos are very personal. Rooted in relationships, emotions, and the in-between moments—those that are easy to overlook but impossible to recreate. There's something raw and honest in the way she looks at people. She doesn't treat them as "subjects" but as individuals with stories worth capturing. For Magdalena, photography isn't about perfection. It's about presence. About being close. About capturing something real before it disappears.

Magdalena tells us about her way of looking at things – about relationships, memories, and moments that stay with us the longest.

What is photography to you?

For me, photography is a pass to the world – a language through which I can build relationships with people, see them, and show how unique the people who appear in my photos are. It's like a breath between life's moments.

Have you ever taken a photo that changed the way you see the world?

I think many times – it's more about paying attention to details than one specific moment. This happens especially when people react to a photo completely differently than I expected.

When did you regret not having your camera with you?

Actually, I had a camera in my hand as a teenager, but I regret not pointing it more often at my mom, dad, and two oldest sisters. At that time, I was focused on skateboarding, subcultures, and friends, which made me completely overlook photographing my family – and today I would really like to have more such photos.

What is the most important photo you've taken and why?

It's not one specific photo, but many – photos from the time when I was caring for my mother in her last days.