Instagram Logo

azuremagazine

Azure Magazine

An award-winning #magazine with a focus on contemporary architecture and design.

4.1K
posts
1.4K
followers
75K
following

Out Now: The Products and Trends Issue! Get it on newsstands now — or online at shop.azuremagazine.com⁠

At the start of 2026, during one of the biggest snowstorms in Toronto’s history, @idstoronto and@designtofestivalfestival lit a fire for design lovers. Azure‘s editors braved the cold to check out exciting launches:@ourse.ca, an all-Canadian brand, was making its official debut at IDS, where other wonderful studios, including@hollismorrisand@coolicanandcompany, were also displaying impressive furnishings. Ensemble (@ensssemble), a collective out of Quebec, beckoned us to an underground gallery where an achingly hip design scene coalesced around inventive pieces like our cover star, the Bolda floor lamp by@lambertetfils. Ensemble’s opening night party brimmed with true camaraderie, the Montreal-imported piquette fuelling animated conversations. The year in design, at least, was off to a good start.

This issue of Azure delights in the possibilities that started in January and will continue into spring, when the big international fairs begin. We look back at the best in Toronto and forward to what awaits in Milan. The latter kicks off our trends package, focused on products and perspectives — or design at every scale, from the teapot to the city. It might seem odd to contain such multitudes in a “trends” package, but Azure’s approach in covering trends has always been to identify the major directions in all the disciplines we cover: furniture, interiors, architecture and (increasingly) urbanism.

Also in this issue: We tour the Sydney Fish Market, Toronto’s new LRT line, and two residential projects — one in Toronto, one in Victoria — where a live-work program informs the interior plan.⁠

Get your copy on shop.azuremagazine.com to find out more.


88
6
1 months ago


Out Now: The Products and Trends Issue! Get it on newsstands now — or online at shop.azuremagazine.com⁠

At the start of 2026, during one of the biggest snowstorms in Toronto’s history, @idstoronto and@designtofestivalfestival lit a fire for design lovers. Azure‘s editors braved the cold to check out exciting launches:@ourse.ca, an all-Canadian brand, was making its official debut at IDS, where other wonderful studios, including@hollismorrisand@coolicanandcompany, were also displaying impressive furnishings. Ensemble (@ensssemble), a collective out of Quebec, beckoned us to an underground gallery where an achingly hip design scene coalesced around inventive pieces like our cover star, the Bolda floor lamp by@lambertetfils. Ensemble’s opening night party brimmed with true camaraderie, the Montreal-imported piquette fuelling animated conversations. The year in design, at least, was off to a good start.

This issue of Azure delights in the possibilities that started in January and will continue into spring, when the big international fairs begin. We look back at the best in Toronto and forward to what awaits in Milan. The latter kicks off our trends package, focused on products and perspectives — or design at every scale, from the teapot to the city. It might seem odd to contain such multitudes in a “trends” package, but Azure’s approach in covering trends has always been to identify the major directions in all the disciplines we cover: furniture, interiors, architecture and (increasingly) urbanism.

Also in this issue: We tour the Sydney Fish Market, Toronto’s new LRT line, and two residential projects — one in Toronto, one in Victoria — where a live-work program informs the interior plan.⁠

Get your copy on shop.azuremagazine.com to find out more.


88
6
1 months ago

Out Now: The Products and Trends Issue! Get it on newsstands now — or online at shop.azuremagazine.com⁠

At the start of 2026, during one of the biggest snowstorms in Toronto’s history, @idstoronto and@designtofestivalfestival lit a fire for design lovers. Azure‘s editors braved the cold to check out exciting launches:@ourse.ca, an all-Canadian brand, was making its official debut at IDS, where other wonderful studios, including@hollismorrisand@coolicanandcompany, were also displaying impressive furnishings. Ensemble (@ensssemble), a collective out of Quebec, beckoned us to an underground gallery where an achingly hip design scene coalesced around inventive pieces like our cover star, the Bolda floor lamp by@lambertetfils. Ensemble’s opening night party brimmed with true camaraderie, the Montreal-imported piquette fuelling animated conversations. The year in design, at least, was off to a good start.

This issue of Azure delights in the possibilities that started in January and will continue into spring, when the big international fairs begin. We look back at the best in Toronto and forward to what awaits in Milan. The latter kicks off our trends package, focused on products and perspectives — or design at every scale, from the teapot to the city. It might seem odd to contain such multitudes in a “trends” package, but Azure’s approach in covering trends has always been to identify the major directions in all the disciplines we cover: furniture, interiors, architecture and (increasingly) urbanism.

Also in this issue: We tour the Sydney Fish Market, Toronto’s new LRT line, and two residential projects — one in Toronto, one in Victoria — where a live-work program informs the interior plan.⁠

Get your copy on shop.azuremagazine.com to find out more.


88
6
1 months ago

Out Now: The Products and Trends Issue! Get it on newsstands now — or online at shop.azuremagazine.com⁠

At the start of 2026, during one of the biggest snowstorms in Toronto’s history, @idstoronto and@designtofestivalfestival lit a fire for design lovers. Azure‘s editors braved the cold to check out exciting launches:@ourse.ca, an all-Canadian brand, was making its official debut at IDS, where other wonderful studios, including@hollismorrisand@coolicanandcompany, were also displaying impressive furnishings. Ensemble (@ensssemble), a collective out of Quebec, beckoned us to an underground gallery where an achingly hip design scene coalesced around inventive pieces like our cover star, the Bolda floor lamp by@lambertetfils. Ensemble’s opening night party brimmed with true camaraderie, the Montreal-imported piquette fuelling animated conversations. The year in design, at least, was off to a good start.

This issue of Azure delights in the possibilities that started in January and will continue into spring, when the big international fairs begin. We look back at the best in Toronto and forward to what awaits in Milan. The latter kicks off our trends package, focused on products and perspectives — or design at every scale, from the teapot to the city. It might seem odd to contain such multitudes in a “trends” package, but Azure’s approach in covering trends has always been to identify the major directions in all the disciplines we cover: furniture, interiors, architecture and (increasingly) urbanism.

Also in this issue: We tour the Sydney Fish Market, Toronto’s new LRT line, and two residential projects — one in Toronto, one in Victoria — where a live-work program informs the interior plan.⁠

Get your copy on shop.azuremagazine.com to find out more.


88
6
1 months ago

Out Now: The Products and Trends Issue! Get it on newsstands now — or online at shop.azuremagazine.com⁠

At the start of 2026, during one of the biggest snowstorms in Toronto’s history, @idstoronto and@designtofestivalfestival lit a fire for design lovers. Azure‘s editors braved the cold to check out exciting launches:@ourse.ca, an all-Canadian brand, was making its official debut at IDS, where other wonderful studios, including@hollismorrisand@coolicanandcompany, were also displaying impressive furnishings. Ensemble (@ensssemble), a collective out of Quebec, beckoned us to an underground gallery where an achingly hip design scene coalesced around inventive pieces like our cover star, the Bolda floor lamp by@lambertetfils. Ensemble’s opening night party brimmed with true camaraderie, the Montreal-imported piquette fuelling animated conversations. The year in design, at least, was off to a good start.

This issue of Azure delights in the possibilities that started in January and will continue into spring, when the big international fairs begin. We look back at the best in Toronto and forward to what awaits in Milan. The latter kicks off our trends package, focused on products and perspectives — or design at every scale, from the teapot to the city. It might seem odd to contain such multitudes in a “trends” package, but Azure’s approach in covering trends has always been to identify the major directions in all the disciplines we cover: furniture, interiors, architecture and (increasingly) urbanism.

Also in this issue: We tour the Sydney Fish Market, Toronto’s new LRT line, and two residential projects — one in Toronto, one in Victoria — where a live-work program informs the interior plan.⁠

Get your copy on shop.azuremagazine.com to find out more.


88
6
1 months ago

Out Now: The Products and Trends Issue! Get it on newsstands now — or online at shop.azuremagazine.com⁠

At the start of 2026, during one of the biggest snowstorms in Toronto’s history, @idstoronto and@designtofestivalfestival lit a fire for design lovers. Azure‘s editors braved the cold to check out exciting launches:@ourse.ca, an all-Canadian brand, was making its official debut at IDS, where other wonderful studios, including@hollismorrisand@coolicanandcompany, were also displaying impressive furnishings. Ensemble (@ensssemble), a collective out of Quebec, beckoned us to an underground gallery where an achingly hip design scene coalesced around inventive pieces like our cover star, the Bolda floor lamp by@lambertetfils. Ensemble’s opening night party brimmed with true camaraderie, the Montreal-imported piquette fuelling animated conversations. The year in design, at least, was off to a good start.

This issue of Azure delights in the possibilities that started in January and will continue into spring, when the big international fairs begin. We look back at the best in Toronto and forward to what awaits in Milan. The latter kicks off our trends package, focused on products and perspectives — or design at every scale, from the teapot to the city. It might seem odd to contain such multitudes in a “trends” package, but Azure’s approach in covering trends has always been to identify the major directions in all the disciplines we cover: furniture, interiors, architecture and (increasingly) urbanism.

Also in this issue: We tour the Sydney Fish Market, Toronto’s new LRT line, and two residential projects — one in Toronto, one in Victoria — where a live-work program informs the interior plan.⁠

Get your copy on shop.azuremagazine.com to find out more.


88
6
1 months ago

Stand in any thriving public space: Maybe it’s the waterfront, families strolling slowly, little ones lagging behind, entranced by waves lapping against the shore. Or perhaps it’s the library: barely audible expressions of awe as books crack open into faraway worlds, heads nodding to music drifting from an audio room where local youth are learning new instruments. Or even the annual festival, women in brightly coloured feathers and sparkling accessories, submerged in the drum’s beat, breath and bodies merging as one. All of these dimensions of public life are made possible by infrastructure — buildings, closed-off roadways, natural resources, and yes, public joy. While most people would view the civic scenes above as being supported by infrastructure that results in expressions of delight, the Public Joy Framework situates joy itself alongside hard infrastructure as an equal scaffold and container for thriving public life and collective flourishing.

Swipe to explore @jay_pitter's Public Joy Framework — and read more at the link in bio.

🖌️ : @jaketobindraws


18
2
13 hours ago

Stand in any thriving public space: Maybe it’s the waterfront, families strolling slowly, little ones lagging behind, entranced by waves lapping against the shore. Or perhaps it’s the library: barely audible expressions of awe as books crack open into faraway worlds, heads nodding to music drifting from an audio room where local youth are learning new instruments. Or even the annual festival, women in brightly coloured feathers and sparkling accessories, submerged in the drum’s beat, breath and bodies merging as one. All of these dimensions of public life are made possible by infrastructure — buildings, closed-off roadways, natural resources, and yes, public joy. While most people would view the civic scenes above as being supported by infrastructure that results in expressions of delight, the Public Joy Framework situates joy itself alongside hard infrastructure as an equal scaffold and container for thriving public life and collective flourishing.

Swipe to explore @jay_pitter's Public Joy Framework — and read more at the link in bio.

🖌️ : @jaketobindraws


18
2
13 hours ago


Stand in any thriving public space: Maybe it’s the waterfront, families strolling slowly, little ones lagging behind, entranced by waves lapping against the shore. Or perhaps it’s the library: barely audible expressions of awe as books crack open into faraway worlds, heads nodding to music drifting from an audio room where local youth are learning new instruments. Or even the annual festival, women in brightly coloured feathers and sparkling accessories, submerged in the drum’s beat, breath and bodies merging as one. All of these dimensions of public life are made possible by infrastructure — buildings, closed-off roadways, natural resources, and yes, public joy. While most people would view the civic scenes above as being supported by infrastructure that results in expressions of delight, the Public Joy Framework situates joy itself alongside hard infrastructure as an equal scaffold and container for thriving public life and collective flourishing.

Swipe to explore @jay_pitter's Public Joy Framework — and read more at the link in bio.

🖌️ : @jaketobindraws


18
2
13 hours ago

Stand in any thriving public space: Maybe it’s the waterfront, families strolling slowly, little ones lagging behind, entranced by waves lapping against the shore. Or perhaps it’s the library: barely audible expressions of awe as books crack open into faraway worlds, heads nodding to music drifting from an audio room where local youth are learning new instruments. Or even the annual festival, women in brightly coloured feathers and sparkling accessories, submerged in the drum’s beat, breath and bodies merging as one. All of these dimensions of public life are made possible by infrastructure — buildings, closed-off roadways, natural resources, and yes, public joy. While most people would view the civic scenes above as being supported by infrastructure that results in expressions of delight, the Public Joy Framework situates joy itself alongside hard infrastructure as an equal scaffold and container for thriving public life and collective flourishing.

Swipe to explore @jay_pitter's Public Joy Framework — and read more at the link in bio.

🖌️ : @jaketobindraws


18
2
13 hours ago

Stand in any thriving public space: Maybe it’s the waterfront, families strolling slowly, little ones lagging behind, entranced by waves lapping against the shore. Or perhaps it’s the library: barely audible expressions of awe as books crack open into faraway worlds, heads nodding to music drifting from an audio room where local youth are learning new instruments. Or even the annual festival, women in brightly coloured feathers and sparkling accessories, submerged in the drum’s beat, breath and bodies merging as one. All of these dimensions of public life are made possible by infrastructure — buildings, closed-off roadways, natural resources, and yes, public joy. While most people would view the civic scenes above as being supported by infrastructure that results in expressions of delight, the Public Joy Framework situates joy itself alongside hard infrastructure as an equal scaffold and container for thriving public life and collective flourishing.

Swipe to explore @jay_pitter's Public Joy Framework — and read more at the link in bio.

🖌️ : @jaketobindraws


18
2
13 hours ago

Stand in any thriving public space: Maybe it’s the waterfront, families strolling slowly, little ones lagging behind, entranced by waves lapping against the shore. Or perhaps it’s the library: barely audible expressions of awe as books crack open into faraway worlds, heads nodding to music drifting from an audio room where local youth are learning new instruments. Or even the annual festival, women in brightly coloured feathers and sparkling accessories, submerged in the drum’s beat, breath and bodies merging as one. All of these dimensions of public life are made possible by infrastructure — buildings, closed-off roadways, natural resources, and yes, public joy. While most people would view the civic scenes above as being supported by infrastructure that results in expressions of delight, the Public Joy Framework situates joy itself alongside hard infrastructure as an equal scaffold and container for thriving public life and collective flourishing.

Swipe to explore @jay_pitter's Public Joy Framework — and read more at the link in bio.

🖌️ : @jaketobindraws


18
2
13 hours ago

Stand in any thriving public space: Maybe it’s the waterfront, families strolling slowly, little ones lagging behind, entranced by waves lapping against the shore. Or perhaps it’s the library: barely audible expressions of awe as books crack open into faraway worlds, heads nodding to music drifting from an audio room where local youth are learning new instruments. Or even the annual festival, women in brightly coloured feathers and sparkling accessories, submerged in the drum’s beat, breath and bodies merging as one. All of these dimensions of public life are made possible by infrastructure — buildings, closed-off roadways, natural resources, and yes, public joy. While most people would view the civic scenes above as being supported by infrastructure that results in expressions of delight, the Public Joy Framework situates joy itself alongside hard infrastructure as an equal scaffold and container for thriving public life and collective flourishing.

Swipe to explore @jay_pitter's Public Joy Framework — and read more at the link in bio.

🖌️ : @jaketobindraws


18
2
13 hours ago

Stand in any thriving public space: Maybe it’s the waterfront, families strolling slowly, little ones lagging behind, entranced by waves lapping against the shore. Or perhaps it’s the library: barely audible expressions of awe as books crack open into faraway worlds, heads nodding to music drifting from an audio room where local youth are learning new instruments. Or even the annual festival, women in brightly coloured feathers and sparkling accessories, submerged in the drum’s beat, breath and bodies merging as one. All of these dimensions of public life are made possible by infrastructure — buildings, closed-off roadways, natural resources, and yes, public joy. While most people would view the civic scenes above as being supported by infrastructure that results in expressions of delight, the Public Joy Framework situates joy itself alongside hard infrastructure as an equal scaffold and container for thriving public life and collective flourishing.

Swipe to explore @jay_pitter's Public Joy Framework — and read more at the link in bio.

🖌️ : @jaketobindraws


18
2
13 hours ago

The 2026 AZ Awards Gala is less than two weeks away, and the anticipation is building. We can’t wait to celebrate with you — so this year, for the first time, we’re kicking off the festivities early with a special pre-gala gathering at @montauksofa’s new Toronto showroom! Drop in on May 28 from 4–6 PM for refreshments, light bites and conversation as we raise a glass to this year’s finalists, winners and the industry at large. The pre-party is included with your gala ticket, making it an easy first stop before the celebration begins.

Register for free at the link in bio.


38
1
1 days ago


At EuroCucina 2026 and beyond, the kitchen emerged as both a technological frontier and a canvas for architectural expression. Our highlights from the biannual showcase of kitchen products suggest a movement toward spaces that are both ingeniously functional and aesthetically refined, with brands pushing boundaries through seamless integration, sculptural forms and modular layouts. Rather than simply adding new features, designers are also rethinking how kitchens relate to the rest of the home, creating environments that adapt to evolving lifestyles and invite creative expression. Below, we round up four products that stood out for their design as much as performance.

Read the full roundup at the link in bio.

Shown:
1 - Minimal Style by @fisherpaykel
2 - Kora by @antonio_citterio_arch for @arclinea_official
3 - Expressive Series by @gaggenauofficial
4 - Flair by @scavolini


16
1
1 days ago

At EuroCucina 2026 and beyond, the kitchen emerged as both a technological frontier and a canvas for architectural expression. Our highlights from the biannual showcase of kitchen products suggest a movement toward spaces that are both ingeniously functional and aesthetically refined, with brands pushing boundaries through seamless integration, sculptural forms and modular layouts. Rather than simply adding new features, designers are also rethinking how kitchens relate to the rest of the home, creating environments that adapt to evolving lifestyles and invite creative expression. Below, we round up four products that stood out for their design as much as performance.

Read the full roundup at the link in bio.

Shown:
1 - Minimal Style by @fisherpaykel
2 - Kora by @antonio_citterio_arch for @arclinea_official
3 - Expressive Series by @gaggenauofficial
4 - Flair by @scavolini


16
1
1 days ago

At EuroCucina 2026 and beyond, the kitchen emerged as both a technological frontier and a canvas for architectural expression. Our highlights from the biannual showcase of kitchen products suggest a movement toward spaces that are both ingeniously functional and aesthetically refined, with brands pushing boundaries through seamless integration, sculptural forms and modular layouts. Rather than simply adding new features, designers are also rethinking how kitchens relate to the rest of the home, creating environments that adapt to evolving lifestyles and invite creative expression. Below, we round up four products that stood out for their design as much as performance.

Read the full roundup at the link in bio.

Shown:
1 - Minimal Style by @fisherpaykel
2 - Kora by @antonio_citterio_arch for @arclinea_official
3 - Expressive Series by @gaggenauofficial
4 - Flair by @scavolini


16
1
1 days ago

At EuroCucina 2026 and beyond, the kitchen emerged as both a technological frontier and a canvas for architectural expression. Our highlights from the biannual showcase of kitchen products suggest a movement toward spaces that are both ingeniously functional and aesthetically refined, with brands pushing boundaries through seamless integration, sculptural forms and modular layouts. Rather than simply adding new features, designers are also rethinking how kitchens relate to the rest of the home, creating environments that adapt to evolving lifestyles and invite creative expression. Below, we round up four products that stood out for their design as much as performance.

Read the full roundup at the link in bio.

Shown:
1 - Minimal Style by @fisherpaykel
2 - Kora by @antonio_citterio_arch for @arclinea_official
3 - Expressive Series by @gaggenauofficial
4 - Flair by @scavolini


16
1
1 days ago

Transformative in design, usage, and appearance, a public sports court in Veracruz, Mexico, is now an accessible gathering space to play, laugh, and enjoy la bulla — the joyful noise of everyday life. Conceived by @tallermulti, the project began in June 2020 with the goal of reimagining a neglected 15,000-square-metre recreational area on the city’s north side, once overrun with trash and remnants of incomplete renovations.

Explore the full project at the link in bio.


22
2
2 days ago

Transformative in design, usage, and appearance, a public sports court in Veracruz, Mexico, is now an accessible gathering space to play, laugh, and enjoy la bulla — the joyful noise of everyday life. Conceived by @tallermulti, the project began in June 2020 with the goal of reimagining a neglected 15,000-square-metre recreational area on the city’s north side, once overrun with trash and remnants of incomplete renovations.

Explore the full project at the link in bio.


22
2
2 days ago


Transformative in design, usage, and appearance, a public sports court in Veracruz, Mexico, is now an accessible gathering space to play, laugh, and enjoy la bulla — the joyful noise of everyday life. Conceived by @tallermulti, the project began in June 2020 with the goal of reimagining a neglected 15,000-square-metre recreational area on the city’s north side, once overrun with trash and remnants of incomplete renovations.

Explore the full project at the link in bio.


22
2
2 days ago

Transformative in design, usage, and appearance, a public sports court in Veracruz, Mexico, is now an accessible gathering space to play, laugh, and enjoy la bulla — the joyful noise of everyday life. Conceived by @tallermulti, the project began in June 2020 with the goal of reimagining a neglected 15,000-square-metre recreational area on the city’s north side, once overrun with trash and remnants of incomplete renovations.

Explore the full project at the link in bio.


22
2
2 days ago

Transformative in design, usage, and appearance, a public sports court in Veracruz, Mexico, is now an accessible gathering space to play, laugh, and enjoy la bulla — the joyful noise of everyday life. Conceived by @tallermulti, the project began in June 2020 with the goal of reimagining a neglected 15,000-square-metre recreational area on the city’s north side, once overrun with trash and remnants of incomplete renovations.

Explore the full project at the link in bio.


22
2
2 days ago

Transformative in design, usage, and appearance, a public sports court in Veracruz, Mexico, is now an accessible gathering space to play, laugh, and enjoy la bulla — the joyful noise of everyday life. Conceived by @tallermulti, the project began in June 2020 with the goal of reimagining a neglected 15,000-square-metre recreational area on the city’s north side, once overrun with trash and remnants of incomplete renovations.

Explore the full project at the link in bio.


22
2
2 days ago

Less Than a Truckload (LTL) is a street-level activation that gives participating brands the opportunity to curate a selection of emerging designers and nonprofit organizations to take part in Fulton Market DesignDays. Sponsoring brands support offering designers a platform during Chicago's Design Week while giving brands a meaningful way to achieve large-scale PR exposure. This year, AZURE Magazine is proud to partner with LTL for this special activation.

https://fultonmarketdesigndays.com/


30
2
3 days ago

Less Than a Truckload (LTL) is a street-level activation that gives participating brands the opportunity to curate a selection of emerging designers and nonprofit organizations to take part in Fulton Market DesignDays. Sponsoring brands support offering designers a platform during Chicago's Design Week while giving brands a meaningful way to achieve large-scale PR exposure. This year, AZURE Magazine is proud to partner with LTL for this special activation.

https://fultonmarketdesigndays.com/


30
2
3 days ago

Less Than a Truckload (LTL) is a street-level activation that gives participating brands the opportunity to curate a selection of emerging designers and nonprofit organizations to take part in Fulton Market DesignDays. Sponsoring brands support offering designers a platform during Chicago's Design Week while giving brands a meaningful way to achieve large-scale PR exposure. This year, AZURE Magazine is proud to partner with LTL for this special activation.

https://fultonmarketdesigndays.com/


30
2
3 days ago

CONTACT Festival (@contactphoto)’s three decades of success is no small feat for any organization. And it’s this eye on the future of photography that makes it evermore relevant. In the last 29 years, it has exhibited 8,500 artists to over 20 million attendees. Darcy Killeen, the festival’s CEO, emphasizes that, despite being the world’s largest photography event, CONTACT remains a grassroots organization at its core. “We are a festival for artists and very proud to put young and emerging photographers side by side with national and international super stars,” he says. This year’s festival, which kicked off on May 1st, taking over sites across Toronto, promises to arouse just as much fervour.

Read the full story at the link in bio.

Shown:
1 - Grow Up #1, 2022, by @jakekimble
2 - Pow, Right in the Kisser, 2025, @jakekimble
3 -An Abundance of Plenty, 2025, by @thandiwe_muriu
4 -Dissidant, 2025, by @sheidajanam


76
2
3 days ago

CONTACT Festival (@contactphoto)’s three decades of success is no small feat for any organization. And it’s this eye on the future of photography that makes it evermore relevant. In the last 29 years, it has exhibited 8,500 artists to over 20 million attendees. Darcy Killeen, the festival’s CEO, emphasizes that, despite being the world’s largest photography event, CONTACT remains a grassroots organization at its core. “We are a festival for artists and very proud to put young and emerging photographers side by side with national and international super stars,” he says. This year’s festival, which kicked off on May 1st, taking over sites across Toronto, promises to arouse just as much fervour.

Read the full story at the link in bio.

Shown:
1 - Grow Up #1, 2022, by @jakekimble
2 - Pow, Right in the Kisser, 2025, @jakekimble
3 -An Abundance of Plenty, 2025, by @thandiwe_muriu
4 -Dissidant, 2025, by @sheidajanam


76
2
3 days ago

CONTACT Festival (@contactphoto)’s three decades of success is no small feat for any organization. And it’s this eye on the future of photography that makes it evermore relevant. In the last 29 years, it has exhibited 8,500 artists to over 20 million attendees. Darcy Killeen, the festival’s CEO, emphasizes that, despite being the world’s largest photography event, CONTACT remains a grassroots organization at its core. “We are a festival for artists and very proud to put young and emerging photographers side by side with national and international super stars,” he says. This year’s festival, which kicked off on May 1st, taking over sites across Toronto, promises to arouse just as much fervour.

Read the full story at the link in bio.

Shown:
1 - Grow Up #1, 2022, by @jakekimble
2 - Pow, Right in the Kisser, 2025, @jakekimble
3 -An Abundance of Plenty, 2025, by @thandiwe_muriu
4 -Dissidant, 2025, by @sheidajanam


76
2
3 days ago

CONTACT Festival (@contactphoto)’s three decades of success is no small feat for any organization. And it’s this eye on the future of photography that makes it evermore relevant. In the last 29 years, it has exhibited 8,500 artists to over 20 million attendees. Darcy Killeen, the festival’s CEO, emphasizes that, despite being the world’s largest photography event, CONTACT remains a grassroots organization at its core. “We are a festival for artists and very proud to put young and emerging photographers side by side with national and international super stars,” he says. This year’s festival, which kicked off on May 1st, taking over sites across Toronto, promises to arouse just as much fervour.

Read the full story at the link in bio.

Shown:
1 - Grow Up #1, 2022, by @jakekimble
2 - Pow, Right in the Kisser, 2025, @jakekimble
3 -An Abundance of Plenty, 2025, by @thandiwe_muriu
4 -Dissidant, 2025, by @sheidajanam


76
2
3 days ago

As sobered-up millennials and Zoomers bypass bars to seek community through fitness classes instead, sports clubs have been (somewhat sardonically) christened the new nightclubs. But the boom in boutique gym openings means rising competition, leaving athletic studios working hard to distinguish themselves from the growing crowd. Not one to shy away from a faceoff, Montreal’s @rebl.club — a boxing studio in the city’s Griffintown neighbourhood — set out to refresh its five-year-old lobby for another round. To deliver the desired hit of personality, the owners turned to local studio @bylemoignan. “What clients like about what I do is that it’s always driven by an experience that’s a bit quirky,” says Tony Lemoignan, the studio’s founder. “You don’t know what I’m going to do next.”

Step inside at the link in bio.
📸: @alexlesage__


101
5
4 days ago

As sobered-up millennials and Zoomers bypass bars to seek community through fitness classes instead, sports clubs have been (somewhat sardonically) christened the new nightclubs. But the boom in boutique gym openings means rising competition, leaving athletic studios working hard to distinguish themselves from the growing crowd. Not one to shy away from a faceoff, Montreal’s @rebl.club — a boxing studio in the city’s Griffintown neighbourhood — set out to refresh its five-year-old lobby for another round. To deliver the desired hit of personality, the owners turned to local studio @bylemoignan. “What clients like about what I do is that it’s always driven by an experience that’s a bit quirky,” says Tony Lemoignan, the studio’s founder. “You don’t know what I’m going to do next.”

Step inside at the link in bio.
📸: @alexlesage__


101
5
4 days ago

As sobered-up millennials and Zoomers bypass bars to seek community through fitness classes instead, sports clubs have been (somewhat sardonically) christened the new nightclubs. But the boom in boutique gym openings means rising competition, leaving athletic studios working hard to distinguish themselves from the growing crowd. Not one to shy away from a faceoff, Montreal’s @rebl.club — a boxing studio in the city’s Griffintown neighbourhood — set out to refresh its five-year-old lobby for another round. To deliver the desired hit of personality, the owners turned to local studio @bylemoignan. “What clients like about what I do is that it’s always driven by an experience that’s a bit quirky,” says Tony Lemoignan, the studio’s founder. “You don’t know what I’m going to do next.”

Step inside at the link in bio.
📸: @alexlesage__


101
5
4 days ago

As sobered-up millennials and Zoomers bypass bars to seek community through fitness classes instead, sports clubs have been (somewhat sardonically) christened the new nightclubs. But the boom in boutique gym openings means rising competition, leaving athletic studios working hard to distinguish themselves from the growing crowd. Not one to shy away from a faceoff, Montreal’s @rebl.club — a boxing studio in the city’s Griffintown neighbourhood — set out to refresh its five-year-old lobby for another round. To deliver the desired hit of personality, the owners turned to local studio @bylemoignan. “What clients like about what I do is that it’s always driven by an experience that’s a bit quirky,” says Tony Lemoignan, the studio’s founder. “You don’t know what I’m going to do next.”

Step inside at the link in bio.
📸: @alexlesage__


101
5
4 days ago

At the mouth of Toronto’s newly renaturalized Don River, a new paradigm for waterfront urbanism is slowly beginning to take shape. The opening of Biidaasige Park last summer offered an early glimpse of the formerly industrial area’s potential, quickly drawing hikers, cyclists and kayakers to the reconfigured river landscape. For now, the park functions primarily as a destination for visitors from across the city. But as the surrounding Ookwemin Minising neighbourhood (previously known as Villiers Island) comes to fruition, it is also poised to become a defining public space for future residents. Formed through the Port Lands Flood Protection project, the new man-made island on the eastern waterfront will see parks, housing and ecological infrastructure developed in tandem. On April 30, the design — a collaboration between professional services firm @ghdglobal, Danish landscape and urbanism studio @sla_architects, Indigenous consultants @trophicdesign and architectural lead @alliesandmorrison, among others — was unanimously approved by @waterfront.to’s Design Review Panel.

Explore the full design at the link in bio.

📸 : @sla_architects


137
3
5 days ago

At the mouth of Toronto’s newly renaturalized Don River, a new paradigm for waterfront urbanism is slowly beginning to take shape. The opening of Biidaasige Park last summer offered an early glimpse of the formerly industrial area’s potential, quickly drawing hikers, cyclists and kayakers to the reconfigured river landscape. For now, the park functions primarily as a destination for visitors from across the city. But as the surrounding Ookwemin Minising neighbourhood (previously known as Villiers Island) comes to fruition, it is also poised to become a defining public space for future residents. Formed through the Port Lands Flood Protection project, the new man-made island on the eastern waterfront will see parks, housing and ecological infrastructure developed in tandem. On April 30, the design — a collaboration between professional services firm @ghdglobal, Danish landscape and urbanism studio @sla_architects, Indigenous consultants @trophicdesign and architectural lead @alliesandmorrison, among others — was unanimously approved by @waterfront.to’s Design Review Panel.

Explore the full design at the link in bio.

📸 : @sla_architects


137
3
5 days ago

At the mouth of Toronto’s newly renaturalized Don River, a new paradigm for waterfront urbanism is slowly beginning to take shape. The opening of Biidaasige Park last summer offered an early glimpse of the formerly industrial area’s potential, quickly drawing hikers, cyclists and kayakers to the reconfigured river landscape. For now, the park functions primarily as a destination for visitors from across the city. But as the surrounding Ookwemin Minising neighbourhood (previously known as Villiers Island) comes to fruition, it is also poised to become a defining public space for future residents. Formed through the Port Lands Flood Protection project, the new man-made island on the eastern waterfront will see parks, housing and ecological infrastructure developed in tandem. On April 30, the design — a collaboration between professional services firm @ghdglobal, Danish landscape and urbanism studio @sla_architects, Indigenous consultants @trophicdesign and architectural lead @alliesandmorrison, among others — was unanimously approved by @waterfront.to’s Design Review Panel.

Explore the full design at the link in bio.

📸 : @sla_architects


137
3
5 days ago

At the mouth of Toronto’s newly renaturalized Don River, a new paradigm for waterfront urbanism is slowly beginning to take shape. The opening of Biidaasige Park last summer offered an early glimpse of the formerly industrial area’s potential, quickly drawing hikers, cyclists and kayakers to the reconfigured river landscape. For now, the park functions primarily as a destination for visitors from across the city. But as the surrounding Ookwemin Minising neighbourhood (previously known as Villiers Island) comes to fruition, it is also poised to become a defining public space for future residents. Formed through the Port Lands Flood Protection project, the new man-made island on the eastern waterfront will see parks, housing and ecological infrastructure developed in tandem. On April 30, the design — a collaboration between professional services firm @ghdglobal, Danish landscape and urbanism studio @sla_architects, Indigenous consultants @trophicdesign and architectural lead @alliesandmorrison, among others — was unanimously approved by @waterfront.to’s Design Review Panel.

Explore the full design at the link in bio.

📸 : @sla_architects


137
3
5 days ago

At the mouth of Toronto’s newly renaturalized Don River, a new paradigm for waterfront urbanism is slowly beginning to take shape. The opening of Biidaasige Park last summer offered an early glimpse of the formerly industrial area’s potential, quickly drawing hikers, cyclists and kayakers to the reconfigured river landscape. For now, the park functions primarily as a destination for visitors from across the city. But as the surrounding Ookwemin Minising neighbourhood (previously known as Villiers Island) comes to fruition, it is also poised to become a defining public space for future residents. Formed through the Port Lands Flood Protection project, the new man-made island on the eastern waterfront will see parks, housing and ecological infrastructure developed in tandem. On April 30, the design — a collaboration between professional services firm @ghdglobal, Danish landscape and urbanism studio @sla_architects, Indigenous consultants @trophicdesign and architectural lead @alliesandmorrison, among others — was unanimously approved by @waterfront.to’s Design Review Panel.

Explore the full design at the link in bio.

📸 : @sla_architects


137
3
5 days ago

Thoughtful workspace design makes room for more than productivity alone. By incorporating areas for informal gathering, quiet pause and flexible working, today’s workplaces can better support the rhythms of the day — creating environments that feel as comfortable as they are functional.

At the link in bio, we round up four lounge chairs that support relaxation in casual yet bustling working environments.

Shown:
1 - Archipen by @katerynasokolova for @noomhome
2 - Hout by @afteroom_studio for @keilhauer_design
3 - Talina by @claudiobellinistudio for @arcadiacontract
4 - Deneuve by @patrick_norguet for @bernhardtdesign


43
6
6 days ago

Thoughtful workspace design makes room for more than productivity alone. By incorporating areas for informal gathering, quiet pause and flexible working, today’s workplaces can better support the rhythms of the day — creating environments that feel as comfortable as they are functional.

At the link in bio, we round up four lounge chairs that support relaxation in casual yet bustling working environments.

Shown:
1 - Archipen by @katerynasokolova for @noomhome
2 - Hout by @afteroom_studio for @keilhauer_design
3 - Talina by @claudiobellinistudio for @arcadiacontract
4 - Deneuve by @patrick_norguet for @bernhardtdesign


43
6
6 days ago

Thoughtful workspace design makes room for more than productivity alone. By incorporating areas for informal gathering, quiet pause and flexible working, today’s workplaces can better support the rhythms of the day — creating environments that feel as comfortable as they are functional.

At the link in bio, we round up four lounge chairs that support relaxation in casual yet bustling working environments.

Shown:
1 - Archipen by @katerynasokolova for @noomhome
2 - Hout by @afteroom_studio for @keilhauer_design
3 - Talina by @claudiobellinistudio for @arcadiacontract
4 - Deneuve by @patrick_norguet for @bernhardtdesign


43
6
6 days ago

Thoughtful workspace design makes room for more than productivity alone. By incorporating areas for informal gathering, quiet pause and flexible working, today’s workplaces can better support the rhythms of the day — creating environments that feel as comfortable as they are functional.

At the link in bio, we round up four lounge chairs that support relaxation in casual yet bustling working environments.

Shown:
1 - Archipen by @katerynasokolova for @noomhome
2 - Hout by @afteroom_studio for @keilhauer_design
3 - Talina by @claudiobellinistudio for @arcadiacontract
4 - Deneuve by @patrick_norguet for @bernhardtdesign


43
6
6 days ago

At the heart of the Gaggenau Expressive Series is a design that balances presence and restraint. The outer frame defines a precise architectural boundary, while the inner frame forms a refined passepartout of stainless-steel set behind smoked glass — strength resolved with elegance. Across the Expressive Series lineup, appliances align flawlessly in form and finish, allowing horizontal or vertical configurations to become a unified architectural statement.

Explore the full collection here: https://www.azuremagazine.com/spec-sheets/gaggenau-expressive-series/


14
1
1 weeks ago

At the heart of the Gaggenau Expressive Series is a design that balances presence and restraint. The outer frame defines a precise architectural boundary, while the inner frame forms a refined passepartout of stainless-steel set behind smoked glass — strength resolved with elegance. Across the Expressive Series lineup, appliances align flawlessly in form and finish, allowing horizontal or vertical configurations to become a unified architectural statement.

Explore the full collection here: https://www.azuremagazine.com/spec-sheets/gaggenau-expressive-series/


14
1
1 weeks ago

At the heart of the Gaggenau Expressive Series is a design that balances presence and restraint. The outer frame defines a precise architectural boundary, while the inner frame forms a refined passepartout of stainless-steel set behind smoked glass — strength resolved with elegance. Across the Expressive Series lineup, appliances align flawlessly in form and finish, allowing horizontal or vertical configurations to become a unified architectural statement.

Explore the full collection here: https://www.azuremagazine.com/spec-sheets/gaggenau-expressive-series/


14
1
1 weeks ago

Jay Pitter (@jay_pitter) is an award-winning public space practitioner and researcher creating joyful public spaces that foster belonging, prosperity, and cultural memory. She advances this work through cultural planning, policy frameworks, and storytelling — bridging rigour and collective imagination to advance public joy as essential urban infrastructure and a human right. Her most recent book, Black Public Joy (Penguin Random House Canada), celebrates Black people’s audacious, complex, and universally embraced public joy expressions and the ways in which they experience safety, belonging and delight in public space. In a new series for Azure, Pitter introduces her broader public joy framework as a civic, cultural and spatial city-building tool and explores how public joy can be applied as a design prompt and social prescription — in deliberate ways that go well beyond the notion of the happiness index.

Swipe to explore her ten Public Joy Principles — and read the full story at the link in bio.


49
1
1 weeks ago

Jay Pitter (@jay_pitter) is an award-winning public space practitioner and researcher creating joyful public spaces that foster belonging, prosperity, and cultural memory. She advances this work through cultural planning, policy frameworks, and storytelling — bridging rigour and collective imagination to advance public joy as essential urban infrastructure and a human right. Her most recent book, Black Public Joy (Penguin Random House Canada), celebrates Black people’s audacious, complex, and universally embraced public joy expressions and the ways in which they experience safety, belonging and delight in public space. In a new series for Azure, Pitter introduces her broader public joy framework as a civic, cultural and spatial city-building tool and explores how public joy can be applied as a design prompt and social prescription — in deliberate ways that go well beyond the notion of the happiness index.

Swipe to explore her ten Public Joy Principles — and read the full story at the link in bio.


49
1
1 weeks ago

Jay Pitter (@jay_pitter) is an award-winning public space practitioner and researcher creating joyful public spaces that foster belonging, prosperity, and cultural memory. She advances this work through cultural planning, policy frameworks, and storytelling — bridging rigour and collective imagination to advance public joy as essential urban infrastructure and a human right. Her most recent book, Black Public Joy (Penguin Random House Canada), celebrates Black people’s audacious, complex, and universally embraced public joy expressions and the ways in which they experience safety, belonging and delight in public space. In a new series for Azure, Pitter introduces her broader public joy framework as a civic, cultural and spatial city-building tool and explores how public joy can be applied as a design prompt and social prescription — in deliberate ways that go well beyond the notion of the happiness index.

Swipe to explore her ten Public Joy Principles — and read the full story at the link in bio.


49
1
1 weeks ago

Jay Pitter (@jay_pitter) is an award-winning public space practitioner and researcher creating joyful public spaces that foster belonging, prosperity, and cultural memory. She advances this work through cultural planning, policy frameworks, and storytelling — bridging rigour and collective imagination to advance public joy as essential urban infrastructure and a human right. Her most recent book, Black Public Joy (Penguin Random House Canada), celebrates Black people’s audacious, complex, and universally embraced public joy expressions and the ways in which they experience safety, belonging and delight in public space. In a new series for Azure, Pitter introduces her broader public joy framework as a civic, cultural and spatial city-building tool and explores how public joy can be applied as a design prompt and social prescription — in deliberate ways that go well beyond the notion of the happiness index.

Swipe to explore her ten Public Joy Principles — and read the full story at the link in bio.


49
1
1 weeks ago

Jay Pitter (@jay_pitter) is an award-winning public space practitioner and researcher creating joyful public spaces that foster belonging, prosperity, and cultural memory. She advances this work through cultural planning, policy frameworks, and storytelling — bridging rigour and collective imagination to advance public joy as essential urban infrastructure and a human right. Her most recent book, Black Public Joy (Penguin Random House Canada), celebrates Black people’s audacious, complex, and universally embraced public joy expressions and the ways in which they experience safety, belonging and delight in public space. In a new series for Azure, Pitter introduces her broader public joy framework as a civic, cultural and spatial city-building tool and explores how public joy can be applied as a design prompt and social prescription — in deliberate ways that go well beyond the notion of the happiness index.

Swipe to explore her ten Public Joy Principles — and read the full story at the link in bio.


49
1
1 weeks ago

Jay Pitter (@jay_pitter) is an award-winning public space practitioner and researcher creating joyful public spaces that foster belonging, prosperity, and cultural memory. She advances this work through cultural planning, policy frameworks, and storytelling — bridging rigour and collective imagination to advance public joy as essential urban infrastructure and a human right. Her most recent book, Black Public Joy (Penguin Random House Canada), celebrates Black people’s audacious, complex, and universally embraced public joy expressions and the ways in which they experience safety, belonging and delight in public space. In a new series for Azure, Pitter introduces her broader public joy framework as a civic, cultural and spatial city-building tool and explores how public joy can be applied as a design prompt and social prescription — in deliberate ways that go well beyond the notion of the happiness index.

Swipe to explore her ten Public Joy Principles — and read the full story at the link in bio.


49
1
1 weeks ago

Jay Pitter (@jay_pitter) is an award-winning public space practitioner and researcher creating joyful public spaces that foster belonging, prosperity, and cultural memory. She advances this work through cultural planning, policy frameworks, and storytelling — bridging rigour and collective imagination to advance public joy as essential urban infrastructure and a human right. Her most recent book, Black Public Joy (Penguin Random House Canada), celebrates Black people’s audacious, complex, and universally embraced public joy expressions and the ways in which they experience safety, belonging and delight in public space. In a new series for Azure, Pitter introduces her broader public joy framework as a civic, cultural and spatial city-building tool and explores how public joy can be applied as a design prompt and social prescription — in deliberate ways that go well beyond the notion of the happiness index.

Swipe to explore her ten Public Joy Principles — and read the full story at the link in bio.


49
1
1 weeks ago

Jay Pitter (@jay_pitter) is an award-winning public space practitioner and researcher creating joyful public spaces that foster belonging, prosperity, and cultural memory. She advances this work through cultural planning, policy frameworks, and storytelling — bridging rigour and collective imagination to advance public joy as essential urban infrastructure and a human right. Her most recent book, Black Public Joy (Penguin Random House Canada), celebrates Black people’s audacious, complex, and universally embraced public joy expressions and the ways in which they experience safety, belonging and delight in public space. In a new series for Azure, Pitter introduces her broader public joy framework as a civic, cultural and spatial city-building tool and explores how public joy can be applied as a design prompt and social prescription — in deliberate ways that go well beyond the notion of the happiness index.

Swipe to explore her ten Public Joy Principles — and read the full story at the link in bio.


49
1
1 weeks ago

Jay Pitter (@jay_pitter) is an award-winning public space practitioner and researcher creating joyful public spaces that foster belonging, prosperity, and cultural memory. She advances this work through cultural planning, policy frameworks, and storytelling — bridging rigour and collective imagination to advance public joy as essential urban infrastructure and a human right. Her most recent book, Black Public Joy (Penguin Random House Canada), celebrates Black people’s audacious, complex, and universally embraced public joy expressions and the ways in which they experience safety, belonging and delight in public space. In a new series for Azure, Pitter introduces her broader public joy framework as a civic, cultural and spatial city-building tool and explores how public joy can be applied as a design prompt and social prescription — in deliberate ways that go well beyond the notion of the happiness index.

Swipe to explore her ten Public Joy Principles — and read the full story at the link in bio.


49
1
1 weeks ago

Jay Pitter (@jay_pitter) is an award-winning public space practitioner and researcher creating joyful public spaces that foster belonging, prosperity, and cultural memory. She advances this work through cultural planning, policy frameworks, and storytelling — bridging rigour and collective imagination to advance public joy as essential urban infrastructure and a human right. Her most recent book, Black Public Joy (Penguin Random House Canada), celebrates Black people’s audacious, complex, and universally embraced public joy expressions and the ways in which they experience safety, belonging and delight in public space. In a new series for Azure, Pitter introduces her broader public joy framework as a civic, cultural and spatial city-building tool and explores how public joy can be applied as a design prompt and social prescription — in deliberate ways that go well beyond the notion of the happiness index.

Swipe to explore her ten Public Joy Principles — and read the full story at the link in bio.


49
1
1 weeks ago

Jay Pitter (@jay_pitter) is an award-winning public space practitioner and researcher creating joyful public spaces that foster belonging, prosperity, and cultural memory. She advances this work through cultural planning, policy frameworks, and storytelling — bridging rigour and collective imagination to advance public joy as essential urban infrastructure and a human right. Her most recent book, Black Public Joy (Penguin Random House Canada), celebrates Black people’s audacious, complex, and universally embraced public joy expressions and the ways in which they experience safety, belonging and delight in public space. In a new series for Azure, Pitter introduces her broader public joy framework as a civic, cultural and spatial city-building tool and explores how public joy can be applied as a design prompt and social prescription — in deliberate ways that go well beyond the notion of the happiness index.

Swipe to explore her ten Public Joy Principles — and read the full story at the link in bio.


49
1
1 weeks ago

Jay Pitter (@jay_pitter) is an award-winning public space practitioner and researcher creating joyful public spaces that foster belonging, prosperity, and cultural memory. She advances this work through cultural planning, policy frameworks, and storytelling — bridging rigour and collective imagination to advance public joy as essential urban infrastructure and a human right. Her most recent book, Black Public Joy (Penguin Random House Canada), celebrates Black people’s audacious, complex, and universally embraced public joy expressions and the ways in which they experience safety, belonging and delight in public space. In a new series for Azure, Pitter introduces her broader public joy framework as a civic, cultural and spatial city-building tool and explores how public joy can be applied as a design prompt and social prescription — in deliberate ways that go well beyond the notion of the happiness index.

Swipe to explore her ten Public Joy Principles — and read the full story at the link in bio.


49
1
1 weeks ago


Instagramストーリーを秘密で見る

Instagramストーリービューアは、Instagramストーリー、動画、写真、またはIGTVを秘密に見たり保存したりできる簡単なツールです。このサービスを使用すると、コンテンツをダウンロードして、いつでもオフラインで楽しむことができます。Instagramで後でチェックしたいものを見つけた場合や、匿名でストーリーを見たい場合、このビューアは最適です。Anonstoriesは、あなたの身元を隠すための優れたソリューションを提供します。Instagramは2023年8月にストーリー機能を導入し、すぐに他のプラットフォームでも採用されました。このフォーマットは魅力的で、時間に敏感なため、ユーザーが写真、動画、または自撮りをテキスト、絵文字、またはフィルターで強化して、24時間限定で公開することができます。この限られた時間枠は、通常の投稿に比べて高いエンゲージメントを生み出します。今日の世界では、ストーリーはソーシャルメディアでつながり、コミュニケーションをとる最も人気のある方法の1つです。しかし、ストーリーを視聴すると、作成者は自分の名前を視聴者リストに見ることができ、プライバシーの懸念があります。もしストーリーを目立たずに閲覧したい場合、ここでAnonstoriesが役立ちます。これを使うことで、自分の身元を明かさずにInstagramのコンテンツを視聴できます。単に調べたいプロファイルのユーザー名を入力すると、その人の最新のストーリーが表示されます。Anonstoriesビューアの特徴:- 匿名閲覧:視聴リストに名前が表示されずにストーリーを視聴 - アカウント不要:Instagramのアカウントにサインインせずに公開コンテンツを視聴 - コンテンツダウンロード:ストーリーコンテンツを直接デバイスに保存してオフラインで使用 - ハイライト視聴:24時間を過ぎてもInstagramのハイライトにアクセス - リポストモニタリング:個人プロファイルのストーリーに対するリポストやエンゲージメントのレベルを追跡 制限事項:- このツールは公開アカウントでのみ動作し、非公開アカウントはアクセスできません。 利点:- プライバシー保護:Instagramのコンテンツを匿名で閲覧可能 - シンプルで簡単:アプリのインストールや登録は不要 - 独自のツール:Instagramが提供していない方法でコンテンツをダウンロードおよび管理可能

Anonstoriesの利点

IGストーリーをプライベートに探る

Instagramの更新をプライバシーを守りつつ、匿名で追跡できます。


プライベートInstagramビューア

プライベートプロファイルビューアを使用して、プロフィールと写真を簡単に匿名で閲覧できます。


無料のストーリービューア

この無料ツールでInstagramストーリーを匿名で閲覧でき、アクティビティがストーリーアップローダーに知られることはありません。

よくある質問

 
匿名性

Anonstoriesを使用すると、作成者に通知されることなくInstagramストーリーを閲覧できます。

 
デバイス互換性

iOS、Android、Windows、macOS、ChromeやSafariなどの最新のブラウザで問題なく動作します。

 
安全性とプライバシー

ログイン情報なしで、安全かつ匿名で閲覧できます。

 
登録不要

ユーザーは、ユーザー名を入力するだけで公開ストーリーを閲覧可能—アカウント登録は不要です。

 
対応フォーマット

写真(JPEG)と動画(MP4)を簡単にダウンロードできます。

 
料金

サービスは無料で利用できます。

 
非公開アカウント

非公開アカウントのコンテンツはフォロワーのみがアクセスできます。

 
ファイル使用

ファイルは個人または教育目的でのみ使用し、著作権法を遵守する必要があります。

 
動作方法

公開ユーザー名を入力して、ストーリーを閲覧またはダウンロードします。サービスはコンテンツをローカルに保存するための直接リンクを生成します。