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stereo___image

Stereo Image

Applied Processes And Techniques Office
c/o @prsseau
Paris + Copenhagen
hello@stereoimage.info

31
posts
320
followers
1.5K
following

@aman festive campaign I directed and photographed.
Magical freedom experiences with an elite team — a journey to remember.

shot by @james____beattie edited by doctor @aitorbigas scored by @stereo___image and graded by @timmasick stylism @reinaogawaclarke

thank you so much for the experience it was pure joy @tommymonkeyfellow

big luv always @wefolkagency @purple_martin_studio @chloeperignon @0h_amy and the local crew/productions who killed it every dawn!

creative direction @aleks__szym @madderlake.studio

model @miayea


2.8K
67
7 months ago


Stereo Image is an independent “one-stop shop” for original music composition and creative sound design.

The expertise of Stereo Image is in advertising : film scores, fashion runway soundtracks, and exhibition soundscapes. The office is currently broadening its scope to sound for products, digital platforms, and interactive multimedia.

Original Music & Creative Sound Design by Pierre Rousseau @prsseau
Management by Alexandre Gaulmin @gaulminou
Identity by Faye And Gina @fayeandgina
Edit by Gwen Ghelid @gwenghelid

Featuring :

1. Rimowa ‘Pilot Case’ by Albert Moya @albert__moya @rimowa
2. ‘À Ta Recherche’ by Caroline Corbasson @carolinecorbasson
3. Mercedes-Benz X Moncler ‘The Art Of Imagination’ by Thibaut Grevet @thibautgrevet @mercedesbenz @moncler
4. Études ‘Twenty’ by Grégoire Dyer @gregoiredyer @etudes
5. Marine Serre ‘Amor Fati’ by Sacha Barbin & Ryan Doubiago @sachabarbin @doubidoubz @marineserre_official
6. ‘Cultes’ by La Horde @la.horde
7. Calvin Klein ‘Performance’ by Thibaut Grevet @thibautgrevet @calvinklein
8. Études X Yves Klein by Chemsedine Herriche @chemsedineherriche @etudes
9. Ill-Studio X Varier Furniture ‘Mind Gravity’ by Thibaut Grevet @thibautgrevet @illstudio @varierfurniture
10. Varier Furniture ‘Ekstrem’ by Teitur Ardal @teiturardal @varierfurniture
11. ‘Worlds’ by Caroline Corbasson @carolinecorbasson
12. Mercedes-Benz X Heron Preston ‘Airbag’ by Ill-Studio & Thibaut Grevet @thibautgrevet @illstudio @heronpreston @mercedesbenz
13. Rimowa ‘Deconstructed’ @rimowa
14. Études ‘Archive Days’ by Chemsedine Herriche @chemsedineherriche @etudes
15. Loewe X On ‘Cloudtilt’ by Thibaut Grevet @thibautgrevet @loewe @on
16. Rimowa ‘Love Letter’ by Thibaut Grevet @thibautgrevet @rimowa
17. ‘Hysteria’ by Théo Casciani @theocasciani
18. Equinox ‘It’s Not Fitness, It’s Life’ @equinox
19. Nike Football ‘Mercurial’ @nikefootball
20. Marine Serre ‘Heartbeat’ by Ewen Spencer @ewenspencer @marineserre_official
21. Marine Serre ‘Rising Shelter’ by Titre Provisoire @titreprovisoire @marineserre_official
22. Moncler ‘Daynamic’ by Thibaut Grevet @thibautgrevet @moncler


542
32
2 years ago

Stereo Image 2026 :

Salomon @salomon “Shaping New Futures”, directed by UNVEIL® @byunveil.

With echoes of contemporary minimalism and forward-leaning production, sculpted synthetic layers unfold along a slow, deliberate trajectory. Anchored by a restrained harmonic foundation, the composition subtly evolves as new visual textures emerge, fluidly supporting transitions from one scene to the next while maintaining technical precision. A measured pulse suggests controlled motion rather than momentum, allowing the visuals to retain clarity and intention.

Discrete sound design gestures—clean rises, low-frequency weight, and carefully timed accents—articulate scene changes and guide the viewer through the film’s narrative progression. Together, the music and creative sound design form a focused, unified framework : understated yet authoritative, expressing the brand’s commitment to innovation, structure, and future-facing design.

Original Music by Stereo Image @stereo___image
Management by Alexandre Gaulmin @gaulminou

© 2026 Stereo Image – APATO

Credits :

Salomon Team : @scottmellin, @nparky, @samanthalinley, Floriane Bonte.

Agency : @bbdo.paris
Production : @loveboat_content
Executive Producer : @frenchghost

Director of Photography@sandervandenbroucke
Editing : @marco__novoa
Original Music & Sound Design : @stereo___image
Additional AI Artists : @machado.cgi, @paragorika
Talent : @anna__barber
Stylist : @isabella.damazio
1st Assistant Stylist : @robbie.van.mierlo
Line Producer : @bertillemuguet
Production Coordinator : @hugopierens

Post-Production : @everest_studio
Post-Production Manager : @jefftinard
Color Grading : @florian_martiny
Voice-Over Casting : @aocprod


3
3 months ago

Stereo Image 2026 :

Mercedes-Benz @mercedesbenz “From 1886 to 2026 – 140 Years of Innovation”, directed by Haw-Lin Services @hawlinservices, produced by Services United @servicesunited.eu.

A refined visual essay tracing invention, identity, and future-facing design through the lineage of Mercedes-Benz. Through a measured progression from the 1886 Patent-Motorwagen to contemporary electric mobility, the film constructs a narrative of continuity — where heritage is not preserved as memory alone, but reactivated as vision.

Built around a restrained cinematic pulse, the music supports the film’s progression with subtle synth textures, minimalist orchestral references and carefully timed transitions. Its slow, deliberate evolution mirrors the narrative arc, moving seamlessly from heritage to future-facing innovation while giving space to the voice-over and visuals. Understated yet precise, the score helps unify the film’s sense of legacy, movement, and vision.

Original Music by Stereo Image @stereo___image
Management by Alexandre Gaulmin @gaulminou

© 2026 Stereo Image – APATO

Credits :

Director & Photography : @hawlinservices
DOP : @robertwisniewski_
1st AC : @kalle.kallovsky
2nd AC : @propanee
Grip : @malan3062
DIT : @perdu.film
Light : @antonandalus
Assistants : @andreaskrufczik, @julius.erdmann
Digi Tech : @raul__suciu
Production : @servicesunited.eu

Special thanks to Michael Mein @micmein at Mercedes-Benz @mercedesbenz and Sina Linke @sinalinke at Services United @servicesunited.eu.


3
1 months ago

@nike Fever Pitch campaign ⛓️‍💥

thank you for this crazy one @davidmfrank @groteskito @sneaky_pix and creative @stacks.studio @honeyhole @rebeccacianfrini @othelo_gervacio @blake1ewis ⛓️‍💥

photographer / Director
@marvin.leuvrey

athletes
@ronaldinho @ethannwaneri @cunha @lj10  @khalilwants

legends everywhere.. cinematographer @jake_gabbay @afrazamara on set and @john_colver for styling, movement @manuloca_ !⛓️‍💥

produced by @wearecounsel @liz__reid @olyasiniakov @christogarfield
hair @tomohiroohashihair
makeup @laurenfreynolds
manicurist @adamslee_
post production @purple_martin_studio
editor @louishvejselbork
original music @stereo___image
colorist @johnlowe.xyz

&big luv @wefolkagency @0h_amy
©️director’s cut


1.1K
31
8 months ago

POV

The 21st-century human being, perhaps more than any who came before, appears fundamentally tethered to the primacy of subjective experience. This is etched into our habits, reflected in our technologies, and echoed in our conversations : an ever-expanding pursuit of experience for the sake of it—layered, curated, intensified—driven less by meaning than by the momentum of seeking.

Then what is it, that is everywhere but always looked for ?

Experience, as the space of consciousness, is inherently subjective—undoubtedly both virtual and real—and so deeply natural that it can appear, in fact, artificial. It is our most intimate possession—what makes the red you see that redness it is. The paradox is that our own experience is the only aspect of reality each of us is absolutely certain of, while remaining one of science’s most persistent “hard problems” to explain, ever since the cognitive revolution nearly 75,000 years ago.

Being so fundamentally qualitative, human experience— in its truest but most absurd form—can’t be measured. It’s always there, always streaming, and thus simply has no quantitative value. Some people are content in the midst of deprivation and danger, while others feel miserable despite having all the pleasures of the world. This is not to say that external circumstances do not matter—but it is your mind, rather than circumstances themselves, that largely determines the quality of your experience. Your mind is the basis and origin of everything you live, and of every contribution you make to the lives of others. It is fundamentally all there is—and given this limited means—it might make sense to observe, understand, and even investigate this mind.

Recognizing experience in the form of a spatially structuring process (and not as an accumulation of moments) is an unconventional way to think of a space as a field of sensorial information rather than a static object—something that can be navigated, practiced and responded to, while simply mirroring the only content we can ever have in mind: experience itself.
-
@on SS26 Special Projects
-
Photography @opheliemrs
Soundscape @prsseau @stereo___image


3
8
10 months ago

POV

The 21st-century human being, perhaps more than any who came before, appears fundamentally tethered to the primacy of subjective experience. This is etched into our habits, reflected in our technologies, and echoed in our conversations : an ever-expanding pursuit of experience for the sake of it—layered, curated, intensified—driven less by meaning than by the momentum of seeking.

Then what is it, that is everywhere but always looked for ?

Experience, as the space of consciousness, is inherently subjective—undoubtedly both virtual and real—and so deeply natural that it can appear, in fact, artificial. It is our most intimate possession—what makes the red you see that redness it is. The paradox is that our own experience is the only aspect of reality each of us is absolutely certain of, while remaining one of science’s most persistent “hard problems” to explain, ever since the cognitive revolution nearly 75,000 years ago.

Being so fundamentally qualitative, human experience— in its truest but most absurd form—can’t be measured. It’s always there, always streaming, and thus simply has no quantitative value. Some people are content in the midst of deprivation and danger, while others feel miserable despite having all the pleasures of the world. This is not to say that external circumstances do not matter—but it is your mind, rather than circumstances themselves, that largely determines the quality of your experience. Your mind is the basis and origin of everything you live, and of every contribution you make to the lives of others. It is fundamentally all there is—and given this limited means—it might make sense to observe, understand, and even investigate this mind.

Recognizing experience in the form of a spatially structuring process (and not as an accumulation of moments) is an unconventional way to think of a space as a field of sensorial information rather than a static object—something that can be navigated, practiced and responded to, while simply mirroring the only content we can ever have in mind: experience itself.
-
@on SS26 Special Projects
-
Photography @opheliemrs
Soundscape @prsseau @stereo___image


3
8
10 months ago

POV

The 21st-century human being, perhaps more than any who came before, appears fundamentally tethered to the primacy of subjective experience. This is etched into our habits, reflected in our technologies, and echoed in our conversations : an ever-expanding pursuit of experience for the sake of it—layered, curated, intensified—driven less by meaning than by the momentum of seeking.

Then what is it, that is everywhere but always looked for ?

Experience, as the space of consciousness, is inherently subjective—undoubtedly both virtual and real—and so deeply natural that it can appear, in fact, artificial. It is our most intimate possession—what makes the red you see that redness it is. The paradox is that our own experience is the only aspect of reality each of us is absolutely certain of, while remaining one of science’s most persistent “hard problems” to explain, ever since the cognitive revolution nearly 75,000 years ago.

Being so fundamentally qualitative, human experience— in its truest but most absurd form—can’t be measured. It’s always there, always streaming, and thus simply has no quantitative value. Some people are content in the midst of deprivation and danger, while others feel miserable despite having all the pleasures of the world. This is not to say that external circumstances do not matter—but it is your mind, rather than circumstances themselves, that largely determines the quality of your experience. Your mind is the basis and origin of everything you live, and of every contribution you make to the lives of others. It is fundamentally all there is—and given this limited means—it might make sense to observe, understand, and even investigate this mind.

Recognizing experience in the form of a spatially structuring process (and not as an accumulation of moments) is an unconventional way to think of a space as a field of sensorial information rather than a static object—something that can be navigated, practiced and responded to, while simply mirroring the only content we can ever have in mind: experience itself.
-
@on SS26 Special Projects
-
Photography @opheliemrs
Soundscape @prsseau @stereo___image


3
8
10 months ago


POV

The 21st-century human being, perhaps more than any who came before, appears fundamentally tethered to the primacy of subjective experience. This is etched into our habits, reflected in our technologies, and echoed in our conversations : an ever-expanding pursuit of experience for the sake of it—layered, curated, intensified—driven less by meaning than by the momentum of seeking.

Then what is it, that is everywhere but always looked for ?

Experience, as the space of consciousness, is inherently subjective—undoubtedly both virtual and real—and so deeply natural that it can appear, in fact, artificial. It is our most intimate possession—what makes the red you see that redness it is. The paradox is that our own experience is the only aspect of reality each of us is absolutely certain of, while remaining one of science’s most persistent “hard problems” to explain, ever since the cognitive revolution nearly 75,000 years ago.

Being so fundamentally qualitative, human experience— in its truest but most absurd form—can’t be measured. It’s always there, always streaming, and thus simply has no quantitative value. Some people are content in the midst of deprivation and danger, while others feel miserable despite having all the pleasures of the world. This is not to say that external circumstances do not matter—but it is your mind, rather than circumstances themselves, that largely determines the quality of your experience. Your mind is the basis and origin of everything you live, and of every contribution you make to the lives of others. It is fundamentally all there is—and given this limited means—it might make sense to observe, understand, and even investigate this mind.

Recognizing experience in the form of a spatially structuring process (and not as an accumulation of moments) is an unconventional way to think of a space as a field of sensorial information rather than a static object—something that can be navigated, practiced and responded to, while simply mirroring the only content we can ever have in mind: experience itself.
-
@on SS26 Special Projects
-
Photography @opheliemrs
Soundscape @prsseau @stereo___image


3
8
10 months ago

POV

The 21st-century human being, perhaps more than any who came before, appears fundamentally tethered to the primacy of subjective experience. This is etched into our habits, reflected in our technologies, and echoed in our conversations : an ever-expanding pursuit of experience for the sake of it—layered, curated, intensified—driven less by meaning than by the momentum of seeking.

Then what is it, that is everywhere but always looked for ?

Experience, as the space of consciousness, is inherently subjective—undoubtedly both virtual and real—and so deeply natural that it can appear, in fact, artificial. It is our most intimate possession—what makes the red you see that redness it is. The paradox is that our own experience is the only aspect of reality each of us is absolutely certain of, while remaining one of science’s most persistent “hard problems” to explain, ever since the cognitive revolution nearly 75,000 years ago.

Being so fundamentally qualitative, human experience— in its truest but most absurd form—can’t be measured. It’s always there, always streaming, and thus simply has no quantitative value. Some people are content in the midst of deprivation and danger, while others feel miserable despite having all the pleasures of the world. This is not to say that external circumstances do not matter—but it is your mind, rather than circumstances themselves, that largely determines the quality of your experience. Your mind is the basis and origin of everything you live, and of every contribution you make to the lives of others. It is fundamentally all there is—and given this limited means—it might make sense to observe, understand, and even investigate this mind.

Recognizing experience in the form of a spatially structuring process (and not as an accumulation of moments) is an unconventional way to think of a space as a field of sensorial information rather than a static object—something that can be navigated, practiced and responded to, while simply mirroring the only content we can ever have in mind: experience itself.
-
@on SS26 Special Projects
-
Photography @opheliemrs
Soundscape @prsseau @stereo___image


3
8
10 months ago

POV

The 21st-century human being, perhaps more than any who came before, appears fundamentally tethered to the primacy of subjective experience. This is etched into our habits, reflected in our technologies, and echoed in our conversations : an ever-expanding pursuit of experience for the sake of it—layered, curated, intensified—driven less by meaning than by the momentum of seeking.

Then what is it, that is everywhere but always looked for ?

Experience, as the space of consciousness, is inherently subjective—undoubtedly both virtual and real—and so deeply natural that it can appear, in fact, artificial. It is our most intimate possession—what makes the red you see that redness it is. The paradox is that our own experience is the only aspect of reality each of us is absolutely certain of, while remaining one of science’s most persistent “hard problems” to explain, ever since the cognitive revolution nearly 75,000 years ago.

Being so fundamentally qualitative, human experience— in its truest but most absurd form—can’t be measured. It’s always there, always streaming, and thus simply has no quantitative value. Some people are content in the midst of deprivation and danger, while others feel miserable despite having all the pleasures of the world. This is not to say that external circumstances do not matter—but it is your mind, rather than circumstances themselves, that largely determines the quality of your experience. Your mind is the basis and origin of everything you live, and of every contribution you make to the lives of others. It is fundamentally all there is—and given this limited means—it might make sense to observe, understand, and even investigate this mind.

Recognizing experience in the form of a spatially structuring process (and not as an accumulation of moments) is an unconventional way to think of a space as a field of sensorial information rather than a static object—something that can be navigated, practiced and responded to, while simply mirroring the only content we can ever have in mind: experience itself.
-
@on SS26 Special Projects
-
Photography @opheliemrs
Soundscape @prsseau @stereo___image


3
8
10 months ago

POV

The 21st-century human being, perhaps more than any who came before, appears fundamentally tethered to the primacy of subjective experience. This is etched into our habits, reflected in our technologies, and echoed in our conversations : an ever-expanding pursuit of experience for the sake of it—layered, curated, intensified—driven less by meaning than by the momentum of seeking.

Then what is it, that is everywhere but always looked for ?

Experience, as the space of consciousness, is inherently subjective—undoubtedly both virtual and real—and so deeply natural that it can appear, in fact, artificial. It is our most intimate possession—what makes the red you see that redness it is. The paradox is that our own experience is the only aspect of reality each of us is absolutely certain of, while remaining one of science’s most persistent “hard problems” to explain, ever since the cognitive revolution nearly 75,000 years ago.

Being so fundamentally qualitative, human experience— in its truest but most absurd form—can’t be measured. It’s always there, always streaming, and thus simply has no quantitative value. Some people are content in the midst of deprivation and danger, while others feel miserable despite having all the pleasures of the world. This is not to say that external circumstances do not matter—but it is your mind, rather than circumstances themselves, that largely determines the quality of your experience. Your mind is the basis and origin of everything you live, and of every contribution you make to the lives of others. It is fundamentally all there is—and given this limited means—it might make sense to observe, understand, and even investigate this mind.

Recognizing experience in the form of a spatially structuring process (and not as an accumulation of moments) is an unconventional way to think of a space as a field of sensorial information rather than a static object—something that can be navigated, practiced and responded to, while simply mirroring the only content we can ever have in mind: experience itself.
-
@on SS26 Special Projects
-
Photography @opheliemrs
Soundscape @prsseau @stereo___image


3
8
10 months ago

POV

The 21st-century human being, perhaps more than any who came before, appears fundamentally tethered to the primacy of subjective experience. This is etched into our habits, reflected in our technologies, and echoed in our conversations : an ever-expanding pursuit of experience for the sake of it—layered, curated, intensified—driven less by meaning than by the momentum of seeking.

Then what is it, that is everywhere but always looked for ?

Experience, as the space of consciousness, is inherently subjective—undoubtedly both virtual and real—and so deeply natural that it can appear, in fact, artificial. It is our most intimate possession—what makes the red you see that redness it is. The paradox is that our own experience is the only aspect of reality each of us is absolutely certain of, while remaining one of science’s most persistent “hard problems” to explain, ever since the cognitive revolution nearly 75,000 years ago.

Being so fundamentally qualitative, human experience— in its truest but most absurd form—can’t be measured. It’s always there, always streaming, and thus simply has no quantitative value. Some people are content in the midst of deprivation and danger, while others feel miserable despite having all the pleasures of the world. This is not to say that external circumstances do not matter—but it is your mind, rather than circumstances themselves, that largely determines the quality of your experience. Your mind is the basis and origin of everything you live, and of every contribution you make to the lives of others. It is fundamentally all there is—and given this limited means—it might make sense to observe, understand, and even investigate this mind.

Recognizing experience in the form of a spatially structuring process (and not as an accumulation of moments) is an unconventional way to think of a space as a field of sensorial information rather than a static object—something that can be navigated, practiced and responded to, while simply mirroring the only content we can ever have in mind: experience itself.
-
@on SS26 Special Projects
-
Photography @opheliemrs
Soundscape @prsseau @stereo___image


3
8
10 months ago

POV

The 21st-century human being, perhaps more than any who came before, appears fundamentally tethered to the primacy of subjective experience. This is etched into our habits, reflected in our technologies, and echoed in our conversations : an ever-expanding pursuit of experience for the sake of it—layered, curated, intensified—driven less by meaning than by the momentum of seeking.

Then what is it, that is everywhere but always looked for ?

Experience, as the space of consciousness, is inherently subjective—undoubtedly both virtual and real—and so deeply natural that it can appear, in fact, artificial. It is our most intimate possession—what makes the red you see that redness it is. The paradox is that our own experience is the only aspect of reality each of us is absolutely certain of, while remaining one of science’s most persistent “hard problems” to explain, ever since the cognitive revolution nearly 75,000 years ago.

Being so fundamentally qualitative, human experience— in its truest but most absurd form—can’t be measured. It’s always there, always streaming, and thus simply has no quantitative value. Some people are content in the midst of deprivation and danger, while others feel miserable despite having all the pleasures of the world. This is not to say that external circumstances do not matter—but it is your mind, rather than circumstances themselves, that largely determines the quality of your experience. Your mind is the basis and origin of everything you live, and of every contribution you make to the lives of others. It is fundamentally all there is—and given this limited means—it might make sense to observe, understand, and even investigate this mind.

Recognizing experience in the form of a spatially structuring process (and not as an accumulation of moments) is an unconventional way to think of a space as a field of sensorial information rather than a static object—something that can be navigated, practiced and responded to, while simply mirroring the only content we can ever have in mind: experience itself.
-
@on SS26 Special Projects
-
Photography @opheliemrs
Soundscape @prsseau @stereo___image


3
8
10 months ago

POV

The 21st-century human being, perhaps more than any who came before, appears fundamentally tethered to the primacy of subjective experience. This is etched into our habits, reflected in our technologies, and echoed in our conversations : an ever-expanding pursuit of experience for the sake of it—layered, curated, intensified—driven less by meaning than by the momentum of seeking.

Then what is it, that is everywhere but always looked for ?

Experience, as the space of consciousness, is inherently subjective—undoubtedly both virtual and real—and so deeply natural that it can appear, in fact, artificial. It is our most intimate possession—what makes the red you see that redness it is. The paradox is that our own experience is the only aspect of reality each of us is absolutely certain of, while remaining one of science’s most persistent “hard problems” to explain, ever since the cognitive revolution nearly 75,000 years ago.

Being so fundamentally qualitative, human experience— in its truest but most absurd form—can’t be measured. It’s always there, always streaming, and thus simply has no quantitative value. Some people are content in the midst of deprivation and danger, while others feel miserable despite having all the pleasures of the world. This is not to say that external circumstances do not matter—but it is your mind, rather than circumstances themselves, that largely determines the quality of your experience. Your mind is the basis and origin of everything you live, and of every contribution you make to the lives of others. It is fundamentally all there is—and given this limited means—it might make sense to observe, understand, and even investigate this mind.

Recognizing experience in the form of a spatially structuring process (and not as an accumulation of moments) is an unconventional way to think of a space as a field of sensorial information rather than a static object—something that can be navigated, practiced and responded to, while simply mirroring the only content we can ever have in mind: experience itself.
-
@on SS26 Special Projects
-
Photography @opheliemrs
Soundscape @prsseau @stereo___image


3
8
10 months ago


POV

The 21st-century human being, perhaps more than any who came before, appears fundamentally tethered to the primacy of subjective experience. This is etched into our habits, reflected in our technologies, and echoed in our conversations : an ever-expanding pursuit of experience for the sake of it—layered, curated, intensified—driven less by meaning than by the momentum of seeking.

Then what is it, that is everywhere but always looked for ?

Experience, as the space of consciousness, is inherently subjective—undoubtedly both virtual and real—and so deeply natural that it can appear, in fact, artificial. It is our most intimate possession—what makes the red you see that redness it is. The paradox is that our own experience is the only aspect of reality each of us is absolutely certain of, while remaining one of science’s most persistent “hard problems” to explain, ever since the cognitive revolution nearly 75,000 years ago.

Being so fundamentally qualitative, human experience— in its truest but most absurd form—can’t be measured. It’s always there, always streaming, and thus simply has no quantitative value. Some people are content in the midst of deprivation and danger, while others feel miserable despite having all the pleasures of the world. This is not to say that external circumstances do not matter—but it is your mind, rather than circumstances themselves, that largely determines the quality of your experience. Your mind is the basis and origin of everything you live, and of every contribution you make to the lives of others. It is fundamentally all there is—and given this limited means—it might make sense to observe, understand, and even investigate this mind.

Recognizing experience in the form of a spatially structuring process (and not as an accumulation of moments) is an unconventional way to think of a space as a field of sensorial information rather than a static object—something that can be navigated, practiced and responded to, while simply mirroring the only content we can ever have in mind: experience itself.
-
@on SS26 Special Projects
-
Photography @opheliemrs
Soundscape @prsseau @stereo___image


3
8
10 months ago

POV

The 21st-century human being, perhaps more than any who came before, appears fundamentally tethered to the primacy of subjective experience. This is etched into our habits, reflected in our technologies, and echoed in our conversations : an ever-expanding pursuit of experience for the sake of it—layered, curated, intensified—driven less by meaning than by the momentum of seeking.

Then what is it, that is everywhere but always looked for ?

Experience, as the space of consciousness, is inherently subjective—undoubtedly both virtual and real—and so deeply natural that it can appear, in fact, artificial. It is our most intimate possession—what makes the red you see that redness it is. The paradox is that our own experience is the only aspect of reality each of us is absolutely certain of, while remaining one of science’s most persistent “hard problems” to explain, ever since the cognitive revolution nearly 75,000 years ago.

Being so fundamentally qualitative, human experience— in its truest but most absurd form—can’t be measured. It’s always there, always streaming, and thus simply has no quantitative value. Some people are content in the midst of deprivation and danger, while others feel miserable despite having all the pleasures of the world. This is not to say that external circumstances do not matter—but it is your mind, rather than circumstances themselves, that largely determines the quality of your experience. Your mind is the basis and origin of everything you live, and of every contribution you make to the lives of others. It is fundamentally all there is—and given this limited means—it might make sense to observe, understand, and even investigate this mind.

Recognizing experience in the form of a spatially structuring process (and not as an accumulation of moments) is an unconventional way to think of a space as a field of sensorial information rather than a static object—something that can be navigated, practiced and responded to, while simply mirroring the only content we can ever have in mind: experience itself.
-
@on SS26 Special Projects
-
Photography @opheliemrs
Soundscape @prsseau @stereo___image


3
8
10 months ago

POV

The 21st-century human being, perhaps more than any who came before, appears fundamentally tethered to the primacy of subjective experience. This is etched into our habits, reflected in our technologies, and echoed in our conversations : an ever-expanding pursuit of experience for the sake of it—layered, curated, intensified—driven less by meaning than by the momentum of seeking.

Then what is it, that is everywhere but always looked for ?

Experience, as the space of consciousness, is inherently subjective—undoubtedly both virtual and real—and so deeply natural that it can appear, in fact, artificial. It is our most intimate possession—what makes the red you see that redness it is. The paradox is that our own experience is the only aspect of reality each of us is absolutely certain of, while remaining one of science’s most persistent “hard problems” to explain, ever since the cognitive revolution nearly 75,000 years ago.

Being so fundamentally qualitative, human experience— in its truest but most absurd form—can’t be measured. It’s always there, always streaming, and thus simply has no quantitative value. Some people are content in the midst of deprivation and danger, while others feel miserable despite having all the pleasures of the world. This is not to say that external circumstances do not matter—but it is your mind, rather than circumstances themselves, that largely determines the quality of your experience. Your mind is the basis and origin of everything you live, and of every contribution you make to the lives of others. It is fundamentally all there is—and given this limited means—it might make sense to observe, understand, and even investigate this mind.

Recognizing experience in the form of a spatially structuring process (and not as an accumulation of moments) is an unconventional way to think of a space as a field of sensorial information rather than a static object—something that can be navigated, practiced and responded to, while simply mirroring the only content we can ever have in mind: experience itself.
-
@on SS26 Special Projects
-
Photography @opheliemrs
Soundscape @prsseau @stereo___image


3
8
10 months ago

POV

The 21st-century human being, perhaps more than any who came before, appears fundamentally tethered to the primacy of subjective experience. This is etched into our habits, reflected in our technologies, and echoed in our conversations : an ever-expanding pursuit of experience for the sake of it—layered, curated, intensified—driven less by meaning than by the momentum of seeking.

Then what is it, that is everywhere but always looked for ?

Experience, as the space of consciousness, is inherently subjective—undoubtedly both virtual and real—and so deeply natural that it can appear, in fact, artificial. It is our most intimate possession—what makes the red you see that redness it is. The paradox is that our own experience is the only aspect of reality each of us is absolutely certain of, while remaining one of science’s most persistent “hard problems” to explain, ever since the cognitive revolution nearly 75,000 years ago.

Being so fundamentally qualitative, human experience— in its truest but most absurd form—can’t be measured. It’s always there, always streaming, and thus simply has no quantitative value. Some people are content in the midst of deprivation and danger, while others feel miserable despite having all the pleasures of the world. This is not to say that external circumstances do not matter—but it is your mind, rather than circumstances themselves, that largely determines the quality of your experience. Your mind is the basis and origin of everything you live, and of every contribution you make to the lives of others. It is fundamentally all there is—and given this limited means—it might make sense to observe, understand, and even investigate this mind.

Recognizing experience in the form of a spatially structuring process (and not as an accumulation of moments) is an unconventional way to think of a space as a field of sensorial information rather than a static object—something that can be navigated, practiced and responded to, while simply mirroring the only content we can ever have in mind: experience itself.
-
@on SS26 Special Projects
-
Photography @opheliemrs
Soundscape @prsseau @stereo___image


3
8
10 months ago

POV

The 21st-century human being, perhaps more than any who came before, appears fundamentally tethered to the primacy of subjective experience. This is etched into our habits, reflected in our technologies, and echoed in our conversations : an ever-expanding pursuit of experience for the sake of it—layered, curated, intensified—driven less by meaning than by the momentum of seeking.

Then what is it, that is everywhere but always looked for ?

Experience, as the space of consciousness, is inherently subjective—undoubtedly both virtual and real—and so deeply natural that it can appear, in fact, artificial. It is our most intimate possession—what makes the red you see that redness it is. The paradox is that our own experience is the only aspect of reality each of us is absolutely certain of, while remaining one of science’s most persistent “hard problems” to explain, ever since the cognitive revolution nearly 75,000 years ago.

Being so fundamentally qualitative, human experience— in its truest but most absurd form—can’t be measured. It’s always there, always streaming, and thus simply has no quantitative value. Some people are content in the midst of deprivation and danger, while others feel miserable despite having all the pleasures of the world. This is not to say that external circumstances do not matter—but it is your mind, rather than circumstances themselves, that largely determines the quality of your experience. Your mind is the basis and origin of everything you live, and of every contribution you make to the lives of others. It is fundamentally all there is—and given this limited means—it might make sense to observe, understand, and even investigate this mind.

Recognizing experience in the form of a spatially structuring process (and not as an accumulation of moments) is an unconventional way to think of a space as a field of sensorial information rather than a static object—something that can be navigated, practiced and responded to, while simply mirroring the only content we can ever have in mind: experience itself.
-
@on SS26 Special Projects
-
Photography @opheliemrs
Soundscape @prsseau @stereo___image


3
8
10 months ago

POV

The 21st-century human being, perhaps more than any who came before, appears fundamentally tethered to the primacy of subjective experience. This is etched into our habits, reflected in our technologies, and echoed in our conversations : an ever-expanding pursuit of experience for the sake of it—layered, curated, intensified—driven less by meaning than by the momentum of seeking.

Then what is it, that is everywhere but always looked for ?

Experience, as the space of consciousness, is inherently subjective—undoubtedly both virtual and real—and so deeply natural that it can appear, in fact, artificial. It is our most intimate possession—what makes the red you see that redness it is. The paradox is that our own experience is the only aspect of reality each of us is absolutely certain of, while remaining one of science’s most persistent “hard problems” to explain, ever since the cognitive revolution nearly 75,000 years ago.

Being so fundamentally qualitative, human experience— in its truest but most absurd form—can’t be measured. It’s always there, always streaming, and thus simply has no quantitative value. Some people are content in the midst of deprivation and danger, while others feel miserable despite having all the pleasures of the world. This is not to say that external circumstances do not matter—but it is your mind, rather than circumstances themselves, that largely determines the quality of your experience. Your mind is the basis and origin of everything you live, and of every contribution you make to the lives of others. It is fundamentally all there is—and given this limited means—it might make sense to observe, understand, and even investigate this mind.

Recognizing experience in the form of a spatially structuring process (and not as an accumulation of moments) is an unconventional way to think of a space as a field of sensorial information rather than a static object—something that can be navigated, practiced and responded to, while simply mirroring the only content we can ever have in mind: experience itself.
-
@on SS26 Special Projects
-
Photography @opheliemrs
Soundscape @prsseau @stereo___image


3
8
10 months ago


POV

The 21st-century human being, perhaps more than any who came before, appears fundamentally tethered to the primacy of subjective experience. This is etched into our habits, reflected in our technologies, and echoed in our conversations : an ever-expanding pursuit of experience for the sake of it—layered, curated, intensified—driven less by meaning than by the momentum of seeking.

Then what is it, that is everywhere but always looked for ?

Experience, as the space of consciousness, is inherently subjective—undoubtedly both virtual and real—and so deeply natural that it can appear, in fact, artificial. It is our most intimate possession—what makes the red you see that redness it is. The paradox is that our own experience is the only aspect of reality each of us is absolutely certain of, while remaining one of science’s most persistent “hard problems” to explain, ever since the cognitive revolution nearly 75,000 years ago.

Being so fundamentally qualitative, human experience— in its truest but most absurd form—can’t be measured. It’s always there, always streaming, and thus simply has no quantitative value. Some people are content in the midst of deprivation and danger, while others feel miserable despite having all the pleasures of the world. This is not to say that external circumstances do not matter—but it is your mind, rather than circumstances themselves, that largely determines the quality of your experience. Your mind is the basis and origin of everything you live, and of every contribution you make to the lives of others. It is fundamentally all there is—and given this limited means—it might make sense to observe, understand, and even investigate this mind.

Recognizing experience in the form of a spatially structuring process (and not as an accumulation of moments) is an unconventional way to think of a space as a field of sensorial information rather than a static object—something that can be navigated, practiced and responded to, while simply mirroring the only content we can ever have in mind: experience itself.
-
@on SS26 Special Projects
-
Photography @opheliemrs
Soundscape @prsseau @stereo___image


3
8
10 months ago

POV

The 21st-century human being, perhaps more than any who came before, appears fundamentally tethered to the primacy of subjective experience. This is etched into our habits, reflected in our technologies, and echoed in our conversations : an ever-expanding pursuit of experience for the sake of it—layered, curated, intensified—driven less by meaning than by the momentum of seeking.

Then what is it, that is everywhere but always looked for ?

Experience, as the space of consciousness, is inherently subjective—undoubtedly both virtual and real—and so deeply natural that it can appear, in fact, artificial. It is our most intimate possession—what makes the red you see that redness it is. The paradox is that our own experience is the only aspect of reality each of us is absolutely certain of, while remaining one of science’s most persistent “hard problems” to explain, ever since the cognitive revolution nearly 75,000 years ago.

Being so fundamentally qualitative, human experience— in its truest but most absurd form—can’t be measured. It’s always there, always streaming, and thus simply has no quantitative value. Some people are content in the midst of deprivation and danger, while others feel miserable despite having all the pleasures of the world. This is not to say that external circumstances do not matter—but it is your mind, rather than circumstances themselves, that largely determines the quality of your experience. Your mind is the basis and origin of everything you live, and of every contribution you make to the lives of others. It is fundamentally all there is—and given this limited means—it might make sense to observe, understand, and even investigate this mind.

Recognizing experience in the form of a spatially structuring process (and not as an accumulation of moments) is an unconventional way to think of a space as a field of sensorial information rather than a static object—something that can be navigated, practiced and responded to, while simply mirroring the only content we can ever have in mind: experience itself.
-
@on SS26 Special Projects
-
Photography @opheliemrs
Soundscape @prsseau @stereo___image


3
8
10 months ago

POV

The 21st-century human being, perhaps more than any who came before, appears fundamentally tethered to the primacy of subjective experience. This is etched into our habits, reflected in our technologies, and echoed in our conversations : an ever-expanding pursuit of experience for the sake of it—layered, curated, intensified—driven less by meaning than by the momentum of seeking.

Then what is it, that is everywhere but always looked for ?

Experience, as the space of consciousness, is inherently subjective—undoubtedly both virtual and real—and so deeply natural that it can appear, in fact, artificial. It is our most intimate possession—what makes the red you see that redness it is. The paradox is that our own experience is the only aspect of reality each of us is absolutely certain of, while remaining one of science’s most persistent “hard problems” to explain, ever since the cognitive revolution nearly 75,000 years ago.

Being so fundamentally qualitative, human experience— in its truest but most absurd form—can’t be measured. It’s always there, always streaming, and thus simply has no quantitative value. Some people are content in the midst of deprivation and danger, while others feel miserable despite having all the pleasures of the world. This is not to say that external circumstances do not matter—but it is your mind, rather than circumstances themselves, that largely determines the quality of your experience. Your mind is the basis and origin of everything you live, and of every contribution you make to the lives of others. It is fundamentally all there is—and given this limited means—it might make sense to observe, understand, and even investigate this mind.

Recognizing experience in the form of a spatially structuring process (and not as an accumulation of moments) is an unconventional way to think of a space as a field of sensorial information rather than a static object—something that can be navigated, practiced and responded to, while simply mirroring the only content we can ever have in mind: experience itself.
-
@on SS26 Special Projects
-
Photography @opheliemrs
Soundscape @prsseau @stereo___image


3
8
10 months ago

Stereo Image Archive :

Études Studio @etudesstudio X Yves Klein @yvesklein_archives (2022) by Chemsedine Herriche @chemsedineherriche.

A short-form soundtrack created for a visual study inspired by Yves Klein, drawing from the raw physicality and minimal palette of the artist’s practice.

The composition revolves around a single sonic gesture — a shifting, textural drone that reflects Klein’s exploration of presence and void. The sparse sonic landscape emphasizes tactility and space, resonating with the blue monochrome and gestural imprints on screen.

Subtle distortions and resonant low-end frequencies give weight to movement, anchoring the silence between visual frames. The result is meditative yet physical, offering a sonic interpretation of Klein’s spatial approach.

Original Music by Pierre Rousseau @prsseau
Management by Alexandre Gaulmin @gaulminou

© 2022 Stereo Image - APATO


3
1 years ago

Stereo Image Archive :

Calvin Klein @calvinklein « Performance » (2022), directed by Thibaut Grevet @thibautgrevet, produced by Division @division.global.

A soundtrack for a video promoting Calvin Klein’s « Performance » line.

The composition is anchored in a steady pulse and low-frequency movement, reflecting the controlled strength and focused energy of the performers. Layers of synthetic textures evolve throughout the piece, mirroring the progression of physical effort and repetition.

Minimal percussion and processed environmental recordings underscore the choreography and editing, allowing motion to drive rhythm. Gradual harmonic shifts provide contrast between tension and release, aligning with the visual interplay of form and athleticism.

Creative sound design plays a central role — sonic gestures are used to accentuate cuts, emphasize breath, and support the film’s raw, tactile quality. The music holds back from traditional resolution, opting instead for a suspended, unresolved momentum.

Original Music & Creative Sound Design by Pierre Rousseau @prsseau
Management by Alexandre Gaulmin @gaulminou

© 2022 Stereo Image - APATO


3
1
1 years ago

Stereo Image 2025 :

Giorgio Armani @giorgioarmani SS25, directed by Alexandre Silberstein @alexandresilberstein, produced by The Box Films @theboxfilms.

A soundtrack for the Giorgio Armani SS25 global campaign, shot in Milan-Centrale.

The music is sequenced in three parts (tension, build, release), and makes use of train recordings identifiably, as sounds of steam engines, railroad crossing alerts or even horns are weaved into the composition itself, emphasising the urgency of departure.

Original Music and Creative Sound Design @stereo___image
Management by Alexandre Gaulmin @gaulminou

© 2025 Stereo Image - APATO


3
2
1 years ago

Stereo Image Archive :

Varier @varierfurniture « Ekstrem in Gentle » (2022), directed by Teitur Ardal @teiturardal, creative direction by Viktor Agaton @viktoragaton at Barkas @barkas.

A soundtrack for a video announcing the latest iteration of the « Ekstrem » chair by Varier @varierfurniture, originally designed in 1984 by Terje Ekstrom.

The progression of both the music and sound design is dictated by the edit, associating key melodic elements and creative sound design experiments to key shots and movements.

Original Music by Pierre Rousseau @prsseau
Management by Alexandre Gaulmin @gaulminou

© 2025 Stereo Image - APATO


3
1
1 years ago

Stereo Image Archive :

Loewe @loewe X On @on « Cloudtilt » (2023), directed by Thibaut Grevet @thibautgrevet, produced by Division @division.global.

A soundtrack for a video announcing a collaboration between Loewe @loewe and On @on, focusing on their « Cloudtilt » shoe.

The music is built around a core vocal sound, which is present throughout the film. This vocal sound is constantly morphing as the composition evolves, evoking the flexibility of both the models and the materials of the shoe itself.

The first part of the soundtrack is intentionally sparse, in order to resonate with the space in the shots. Creative sound design gives the cuts in the edit additional weight, with particular sonic textures highlighting specific visual techniques. The composition becomes more dense midway through the film, with the introduction of a synthetic arpeggio as well as light percussion, assembled from various recordings of footsteps. The resolution is accompanied by string instruments, which emphasise the sense of movement and the allusions to contemporary dance.

Original Music by Pierre Rousseau @prsseau
Management by Alexandre Gaulmin @gaulminou

© 2025 Stereo Image - APATO


3
1 years ago

Stereo Image Archive :

Rimowa @rimowa « Pilot Case » (2023), directed by Albert Moya @albert__moya, creative direction by Marin Mornieux @marin.mornieux.

A soundtrack for a short video celebrating the return of Rimowa’s iconic pilot case, with additional sound design by Moritz Staub @moritz.staub.

The music is structured in three parts, with a mysterious introduction, an epic “lift-off”, and an intentionally ambiguous conclusion, as the main character advances into the unknown.

The composition draws inspiration from contemporary science-fiction soundtracks and early 20th century French impressionism. The instrumentation and general sound treatment pay close attention to the set design and general colouring of the film, with a particular accent on colder, reverberant tones at first, in order to install a form of tension, only later introducing a “human touch” with a distant vocal pattern and an orchestral arrangement to relieve suspense.

Original Music by Pierre Rousseau @prsseau
Management by Alexandre Gaulmin @gaulminou

© 2025 Stereo Image - APATO


3
1 years ago


비밀리에 인스타그램 스토리 보기

인스타그램 스토리 뷰어는 인스타그램 스토리, 비디오, 사진 또는 IGTV를 비밀리에 보고 저장할 수 있는 간단한 도구입니다. 이 서비스를 통해 콘텐츠를 다운로드하고 언제든지 오프라인으로 즐길 수 있습니다. 인스타그램에서 나중에 확인하고 싶은 흥미로운 콘텐츠를 찾거나 익명으로 스토리를 보고 싶다면, 우리 뷰어가 적합합니다. Anonstories는 신원을 숨길 수 있는 훌륭한 솔루션을 제공합니다. 인스타그램은 2023년 8월에 스토리 기능을 출시했으며, 이 기능은 흥미롭고 시간에 민감한 형식으로 빠르게 다른 플랫폼에 채택되었습니다. 스토리는 사용자가 텍스트, 이모지 또는 필터로 보강된 사진, 비디오 또는 셀카를 공유할 수 있게 해주며, 24시간 동안만 표시됩니다. 이 제한된 시간 동안 높은 참여를 유도하며 일반 게시물보다 더 많은 반응을 얻을 수 있습니다. 오늘날 스토리는 소셜 미디어에서 연결하고 소통하는 가장 인기 있는 방법 중 하나입니다. 그러나 스토리를 볼 때, 제작자는 자신의 뷰어 목록에서 당신의 이름을 볼 수 있으며, 이는 개인 정보 보호에 대한 우려를 일으킬 수 있습니다. 만약 스토리를 아무도 모르게 탐색하고 싶다면? 그때 Anonstories가 유용해집니다. 이 도구는 신원을 드러내지 않고 공개된 인스타그램 콘텐츠를 볼 수 있게 해줍니다. 관심 있는 프로필의 사용자명을 입력하면 해당 프로필의 최신 스토리를 확인할 수 있습니다. Anonstories 뷰어의 특징: - 익명 브라우징: 뷰어 목록에 나타나지 않고 스토리를 볼 수 있습니다. - 계정 필요 없음: 인스타그램 계정에 가입하지 않고 공개 콘텐츠를 볼 수 있습니다. - 콘텐츠 다운로드: 스토리 콘텐츠를 직접 다운로드하여 오프라인에서 사용할 수 있습니다. - 하이라이트 보기: 24시간 제한을 넘어서 인스타그램 하이라이트를 볼 수 있습니다. - 리포스트 모니터링: 개인 프로필의 스토리 리포스트나 참여도를 추적할 수 있습니다. 제한 사항: - 이 도구는 공개 계정에서만 작동하며, 개인 계정은 접근할 수 없습니다. 장점: - 개인 정보 보호 친화적: 인스타그램 콘텐츠를 보면서도 눈에 띄지 않습니다. - 간단하고 쉬움: 앱 설치나 등록이 필요 없습니다. - 독점 도구: 인스타그램에서 제공하지 않는 방식으로 콘텐츠를 다운로드하고 관리할 수 있습니다.

Anonstories의 장점

인스타그램 스토리 비공개로 탐색

인스타그램 업데이트를 비밀리에 추적하고 개인 정보를 보호하며 익명으로 남을 수 있습니다.


개인 인스타그램 뷰어

개인 프로필 뷰어를 사용하여 쉽게 프로필과 사진을 익명으로 볼 수 있습니다.


무료 스토리 뷰어

이 무료 도구는 인스타그램 스토리를 익명으로 볼 수 있게 해주며, 스토리 업로더에게 활동을 숨길 수 있습니다.

자주 묻는 질문

 
익명성

Anonstories는 사용자가 인스타그램 스토리를 볼 때 제작자에게 알림을 보내지 않도록 합니다.

 
디바이스 호환성

iOS, Android, Windows, macOS, Chrome, Safari와 같은 최신 브라우저에서 원활하게 작동합니다.

 
안전성 및 개인 정보 보호

로그인 정보 없이 안전하고 익명으로 브라우징할 수 있습니다.

 
등록 필요 없음

사용자는 간단히 사용자명을 입력하여 공개된 스토리를 볼 수 있습니다. 계정이 필요하지 않습니다.

 
지원 형식

사진(JPEG)과 비디오(MP4)를 쉽게 다운로드합니다.

 
비용

이 서비스는 무료로 제공됩니다.

 
비공개 계정

비공개 계정의 콘텐츠는 팔로워만 접근할 수 있습니다.

 
파일 사용

파일은 개인적 또는 교육적 용도로만 사용 가능하며 저작권 규정을 준수해야 합니다.

 
작동 방식

공개된 사용자명을 입력하여 스토리를 보거나 다운로드할 수 있습니다. 서비스는 콘텐츠를 로컬에 저장할 수 있는 직접 링크를 생성합니다.