Following the recent launch of our brand new website with a newly designed search engine, the new Special Collections Search Function aids customers in finding their desired image or video by refining their search criteria in specific categories. Based on an internal keyword search, dynamic results include both video and image content from Providers’ collections, photographers’ submissions and age fotostock shoots. The selections are live – the daily upload of new content on the THP platform delivers fresh results in every category, every day.

A new search experience. age fotostock always improving

The special categories include:

Only People
From portraits to groups, every image is model released.

Food
The selection that tickles your tastebuds, offering food, drink, gastronomy and cuisine.

Architecture & Decoration
Traditional and contemporary works from architects and designers across the globe.

Gardening
Horticulture, complete species of plants and flowers, gardening and gardens.

Wildlife
The animal kingdom reigns, from domestic species to the most rare and wild.

Travel
The world’s bounty of exotic locations, vibrant, diverse cultures and stunning landscapes.

Art & History
Educational and visual imagery covering archaeology, ancient & fine art, people and historical achievements.

Celebrities
Famous stars and personalities

Julieanne Eason, the Content Manager and International Coordinator at age fotostock, comments, “These special categories have been designed specifically with the customer in mind. They both ease the customers ‘search stress’ by offering the first relevant step into a specific search, as well as making our small yet outstanding collections more visible.”

Alfonso Gutiérrez, CEO of age fotostock, adds, “We have listened to our clients and are developing the new search engine and all collateral functionalities based on their advice, that says that while having millions of images is great, the reality is that finding specialized images is often a pain. Searching within specialized groups of images contained in a large collection is adapting the search to today’s needs, requirements and demands.”