Photographers, you now only have two days left to enter the 2016 National Geographic Travel Photographer of the Year Contest! Last day is Friday, May 27. A final batch of images was just sent to us by National Geographic to show you what you’ll be up against. The grand prize winner will receive a once-in-a-lifetime experience, a seven-day Polar Bear Photo Safari for two at Churchill Wild–Seal River Heritage Lodge, a National Geographic Unique Lodge of the World. Yes, a polar bear safari! Imagine the pictures you could take! Don’t hesitate. Enter now!
Above:
…but I am not the only one
A lonely zebra in the midst of a field full of flowers. Near Serengeti National Park, Tanzania, Africa.
Photo and caption by Yuval Ofek / National Geographic Travel Photographer of the Year Contest
Colorful Market
Colorful market in Bangkok city, Thailand. Location: Bangkok, Bangkok, Thailand
Photo and caption by Kajan Madrasmail / National Geographic Travel Photographer of the Year Contest
Snowy bride
Brave bride getting wed in the only day of snow in Tokyo, winter 2014. Location: Shinjuku, Tokyo, Japan
Photo and caption by Stephane Mangin / National Geographic Travel Photographer of the Year Contest
Mystical Forest
You don’t need to travel far from cities to visit Narnia. This 7 gill shark was photographed in a kelp forest just off the shore of Simonstown near Cape Town.Location: Simon’s Town, Western Cape, South Africa
Photo and caption by Tracey Jennings / National Geographic Travel Photographer of the Year Contest
Midnight Thirst
In the still of a star lit night, buffalo cautiously approach to quench their thirst. A long exposure with light painting allows me to capture the moment forever Location: South Africa
Photo and caption by Alison Langevad / National Geographic Travel Photographer of the Year Contest
River Delta 6
One of a series of aerial shots taken from a helicopter over the fabulous river deltas in South Iceland. This one depicts the end of the journey for one river as it winds its way to the ocean. The brilliant colors are a result of mineral deposits picked up by the glacial waters. We were lucky to shoot on a gorgeously sunny day which really brought out the colors. Location: South Iceland
Photo and caption by Stephen King / National Geographic Travel Photographer of the Year Contest
Blue Lagoon
People enjoying their time in the legendary Blue Lagoon outside of Reykjavik in Iceland. Location: Blue Lagoon, Iceland
Photo and caption by Slawek Kozdras / National Geographic Travel Photographer of the Year Contest
On the Top of the World
The shot is the result of a magical, powerful instant seen from the top of Sonchaux (CH), a day when the clouds were particulary low. I though I was like immerged in a fairytale, out of every human scale.
Photo and caption by Boukhechina Malik / National Geographic Travel Photographer of the Year Contest
The Colourful
Ho Chi Minh City This is taken from the 12th floor of a hostel. Me and my friends were amazed how beautiful is the night view, let alone the vibrant side of Ho Chi Minh City in the morning. Location: Cây Bàng Một, Ho Chi Minh, Vietnam
Photo and caption by King Fung Wong / National Geographic Travel Photographer of the Year Contest
What does childhood look like for children without traditional schooling or modern electronic devices, like iPads or phones? How would these kids play? This was the thought behind Niki Boon’s series of photos that show her children’s “unconventional” lives in rural New Zealand. Living on a 10-acre property she documents their days together in an “environment full of nature and uninhibited play.” I love the moody black and white photos, the strong stares and the carefree nature of the kids.
For these photos, Boon was one of the winners in the Personal category of PDN’s Photo Annual 2016.
I just can’t get enough of minimalist photos that have lots of negative space. That must be the reason I’m so drawn to these drone photos by Tahiti-based photographer Helene Havard. “They are together but alone,” she says. As a couple hold hands in the infinite blue sea or lays side by side next to an endless array of palm trees, you get the feeling that at that particular moment, nothing else matters but being together. It’s as if they are the last two people on Earth and they’re enjoying the total and complete solitude.
Havard works in collaboration with Flying World Pictures to capture these breathtaking shots. She instructs the drone operator from the ground. Couples look like, as Feature Shoot put it, “conjoined specks dotting the topography below.” Having spent my own honeymoon in Tahiti, I’m particularly fond of these photos. They take me back to a place I’ll never forget, the turquoise waters are really that blue and the overwater bungalows really are that amazing. It’s like experiencing a completely different world.
One of my favorite photo competition, The National Geographic Travel Photographer of the Year Contest is now well underway, and boy, do they have some spectacular nature entries. Photographers, you still have time to enter, images will be accepted until the end of the month, May 27. As they state, “Enter your most powerful photos for a chance to become the 2016 National Geographic Travel Photographer of the Year. Show us photos that tell the story of a place or reveal insights about what inspires you when you travel.” The grand prize winner gets to go on an amazing adventure, a seven-day Polar Bear Safari for two in Churchill, Canada. The contest has three general categories: Nature, Cities and People. Courtesy of National Geographic, enjoy these stunning entries under Nature.
This photo is shot shortly after sunrise at mesquite dunes. George Lucas has chosen this location for some scenes of Star Wars. The blue background is not the sky. These are mountains in the distance. Location: Death Valley, California. Johannes Öhl/National Geographic Travel Photographer of the Year Contest
Last December I sailed to Antarctica on a 54 feet long-haul steel vessel. As we entered the Polar Zone this was one of the first icebergs we saw. Sculpted by the wind and waves, majestic in scale and with a dazzling white colour with layers of deep blue. The sun makes a quick appearance through a hole in the clouds, just in time for this shot. Massimo Rumi/National Geographic Travel Photographer of the Year Contest
I took this photo in July 2014 at Trollstigen in Norway. Standing there alone in the fog, I was waiting for the view to become clear. And then it happened, the fog disappeared and though it was 1 am already, one car came slowly up the steep serpentines. It was my dream for a long time to take a photo of lighttrails like this in Norway – and it was just an awesome feeling that it worked out on the most beautiful and famous street. A few minutes later the fog returned, even thicker than before. Christoph Schaarschmidt/National Geographic Travel Photographer of the Year Contest
During a snow storm I decided to head over to Bryce Canyon National Park and enjoy the freshly fallen snow. Visibility was down to almost zero, but then I found this single tree right next to a snow drift and knew this would be my shot. Yvonne Baur/National Geographic Travel Photographer of the Year Contest
I had heard a lot about how beautiful Uluru should look like when it rains. But I never believed that I would see it with my own eyes because the red center of Australia is a very arid area. That’s one of the reasons why Uluru is such a special place for the Anangu – the local aboriginal clan. If it rains, the water fills up the reservoirs around the rock, the only water source for several kilometers. This makes the Uluru Kata Tjuta National Park to special place for lots of rare animals as well. Christoph Schaarschmidt/National Geographic Travel Photographer of the Year Contest
Just how creative are some individuals in this world? How did a photographer capture that moment? These are the questions I asked myself over and over during the nearly eight years I was editor-in-chief at My Modern Met. Every day, I had the rare privilege of writing about and curating art, design and photography and I fell head over heals for each of the three disciplines. (My heart ultimately led me to favor photography.) Photos have a way of leaving an indelible mark on your mind, they change your very being, providing you with a new perspective or a giving you a new appreciation for life.
Today, I’d like to share 21 images that have ultimately led me to want to become a photographer. These photos do everything from make me see the beauty in the everyday to nudge me to live in the present. While some photos capture the amazing feeling of love, still others tell a fascinating story of a foreign culture.
I hope you enjoy this collection.
Above: After living in Nepal and exploring Tibet and the Himalayas for more than a decade, photographer Hamid Sardar-Afkhami decided he would travel to outer Mongolia to document the nomadic tribes and their unique way of life. Sardar took photos of the Dukha people, Mongolia’s last nomadic reindeer herders. The Dukha tribe is quickly disappearing. Only about 44 Dukha families remain, or between 200 to 400 people. In the 1970s, it’s estimated that there was a population of about 2,000 reindeer but that number has since dwindled to about 600. Here, a young child rests her head on one of the reindeer.
This striking black and white photo of a man feeding ducks and swans in the snow is one you just can’t get out of your mind. It was shot by photographer Marcin Ryczek in Krakow, Poland. The contrast between river and bank as well as the framing are just perfect.
This is an iconic and powerful portrait of composer and pianist Igor Stravinsky by Arnold Newman. The piano cleverly appears like a large musical note. Simple and minimalist but powerful.
Tim Walker shot his first Vogue fashion story at the age of 25, and has been contributing his magical images to the magazine ever since. He’s known for fantastical settings and theatrical characters.
This photo of a man reading while an elephant leans into him looks like it was taken from the pages of a storybook. If you look closely, in the background you can see other elephants roaming the land. In 2010, this serene photo was shot in Chiang Mai, Thailand by famed photojournalist Steve McCurry.
Back in 2011, when the Vancouver Canucks lost in game 7 of the Stanley Cup Finals, it sent their home city into chaos. Riots broke out, leaving buildings destroyed, cars burned and even people injured. Seemingly out of the blue, photojournalist Richard Lam was able to capture a truly unique image of a couple kissing.
I discovered the photos of Alex Stoddard when he was just 17-years-old. By that time, he had already created an impressive body of work like this one of a cotton cloud coming out of his mouth.
This hilarious photo of a fallen superhero is by Flickr favorite Rosie Hardy. She’s not just a master of self-portraits, she creates stunning portraits of other people as well.
Photographer Vitor Schietti uses long exposures to create light paintings all around trees. The lights appear to rain down from the branches!
This photo, called Felix, Gladys and Rover was shot in New York in 1974 by photographer Elliott Erwitt. While at first glance you think you’re looking at two pairs of human feet and then a small dog, you’d be surprised to find out that the first pair of legs actually belongs to a large dog! The advertising and documentary photographer is known for his black and white photos of funny and ironic situations.
Hawaii-based photographer Dallas Nagata White captured this incredibly “hot” kiss by an active lava flow. Her husband dipped her into a dramatic kiss as rain began falling. There’s hardly any retouching, the photographer only adjusted the color contrast and sharpened the image. This photo leaves you breathless. “When we say this was a spontaneous shot, we mean the kissing pose was,” White states. “We’d all first taken our ‘Look at us, standing next to lava in the rain’ power stance photos, but after Ed and I had taken a couple, he said, ‘One more,’ and dipped me in a kiss without warning. It was the only kiss shot we took that night.”
Jason Lee is a father who creatively captures his kids. Using a bit of Photoshop, he makes silly scenes come to life, like this one of his two girls playing around with duct tape.
Migrant Mother, shot in 1936 by photographer Dorothea Lange is known as the iconic image of the Great Depression. Florence Owens Thompson, was a 32-year-old destitute pea picker in California who had seven children. You can just see the worry, of how she’s going to feed her children, etched on this mother’s face.
Elena Shumilova is a Russian mother who takes stunning photos of her children with the animals on her farm. This one, of her son gently touching their large dog, shows the sweet friendship between the two.
Moscow-based Russian photographer Katerina Plotnikova is known for her breathtaking fairy tale-like photos of women with live animals. This one, of a bear kissing a woman’s hand looks like it’s been Photoshopped but it hasn’t. While these encounters may seem dangerous, they’re actually quite safe because the photographer enlists the help of professional animal trainers.
Kirsty Mitchell is one of those photographers who works tirelessly to create storybook-like photos in-camera. She, along with a dedicated team, work on lighting, make-up and wardrobe to make enchanting worlds come to life. This photo, of a women in an ombre dress standing in a lavender field, was one of her earlier works.
For the 2012 National Geographic photo contest, British-born, Thai-based photographer Ashley Vincent won the overall prize and first place in the wildlife category, with this fun image of an tigress shaking off water while at the zoo.
Photographer Chris Morgan shot this magnificent macro photograph of a hummingbird n 2011 at Bosque De Paz, a 3,000 acre privately-owned biological reserve in the middle of Costa Rica. He got a clear shot of the eye and captured the beautiful colors of the feathers.
Chinese photographer Fan Ho captured the everyday life of Hong Kong throughout the 1950s and 1960s. This image is captivating because it captures light and shadow in an artistic way. The shot is called Approaching Shadow and it was taken in 1954.
Using a long exposure, the path of the kayak paddle over serene lakes is brought to life. As photographer Stephen Orlando of Ontario, Canada states, “I’m fascinated with capturing motion through time and space into a single photograph. Using LED lights with custom color patterns and long exposure photography, I’m able to tell the story of movement. This technique reveals beautiful light trails created by paths of familiar objects. These light trails have not been artificially created with Photoshop and represent the actual paths of the objects.”
Hungarian photographer Noell S. Oszvald‘s conceptual black and white photos are striking. This one, of a bird flying in the air while a woman hunches over with her hands over her eyes is unforgettable.
It’s already that time of year! Time to kick off one of my favorite photo contests, The National Geographic Travel Photographer of the Year! Photographers, come share your favorite travel experiences like that shocking face to face encounter with a polar bear or that magnificent erupting volcano. The grand prize winner will receive a 7-day Polar Bear Safari for two at Churchill Wild-Seal River Heritage Lodge, a National Geographic Unique Lodge of the World.
You have about a month to enter. National Geographic will accept submissions until May 27. Courtesy of National Geographic, here are some early entries.
Above: Wherever you go, I will follow you!!: Romance is in the air. It was the time of day immediately following sunset. I heard a voice. “Wherever you go, I will follow you” the voice says.
Location: Biei, Hokkaido, Japan
Photo and caption by Hiroki Inoue/National Geographic Travel Photographer of the Year Contest
Impala at Sunrise Impala silhouetted as the sun rises in the Masai Mara, Kenya.
Location: Masai Mara, Kenya
Photo and caption by Kellie Netherwood/National Geographic Travel Photographer of the Year Contest
Dronie – Selfie taken with a Drone: This image is an aerial selfie image. We laid down on the bridge covered with snow and flew the drone above us to take this image.
Location: Mittersill, New Hampshire, United States
Photo and caption by Manish Mamtani/National Geographic Travel Photographer of the Year Contest
Ballet dancer: When a Japanese larch’s twig was exposed to illumination, looked like hands and feet. It was like the ballet dancer.
Location: Biei, Hokkaido, Japan
Photo and caption by Hiroshi Tanita/National Geographic Travel Photographer of the Year Contest
Lioness @ Sunset: Lioness (Panthera leo) at sunset, Vumbura Concession, Okavango Delta, Botswana, Africa.
Location: Okavango Delta, Botswana, Africa
Photo and caption by Marja Schwartz/National Geographic Travel Photographer of the Year Contest
Face to Face: A polar bear on Wahlenbergfjorden off of Svalbard. I was in a zodiac off shore when he sauntered down to the beach to sniff us out. Soon losing interest, he retreated for a nap and we left him in peace.
Location: Haugen, Svalbard, Svalbard and Jan Mayen
Photo and caption by Ari Ross/National Geographic Travel Photographer of the Year Contest
Bond Between Friends: Shot in Sakrebailu Elephant Camp, Shimoga, India. This camp works towards rehabilitating rescued elephants from circuses and human animal conflict zones. The elephants are trained here by experienced Mahouts and forms a lasting bond between the two. Every morning these Mahouts get their elephants for a bath in the nearby river. This is also when people are allowed to interact with the elephants.
Location: Shimoga, Karnataka, India
Photo and caption by Aditya D. /National Geographic Travel Photographer of the Year Contest
Peaks & Penguins in Antarctic Sunrise: Stunning peaks & thousands of King Penguins on South Georgia in soft early sunrise. The photography challenge was to resist shooting only Penguin close-ups (very tempting for sure) & step back occasionally to be equally amazed by the landscape in which they live. Special Bonus: It was 100 years to the month that Shackelton’s boat (Endurance) finally went under the Antarctic pack ice (Nov 1915), precipitating his epic traverse of South Georgia, before finding help at nearby Stromness (1916).
Location: South Georgia
Photo and caption by Shivesh R./National Geographic Travel Photographer of the Year Contest
Jonas Blizzard and the Flatiron Building: While walking through the Jonas Winter Storm that swept across the East Coast last week, I captured this shot of the Flatiron Building against a backdrop of swirling snow. With the exception of a few minor details like logos and a food cart, the image looks like an impressionist right out of another another century. The cloudy atmosphere and gusty winds creates patterns that appear uncannily like brush strokes.
Location: New York City, New York, United States
Photo and caption by Michele Palazzo/National Geographic Travel Photographer of the Year Contest
La Fournaise volcano: The last eruption of LA Fournaise Volcano, Réunion Island.
Location: Saint-Denis, Reunion, Reunion
Photo and caption by Gaby Barathieu/National Geographic Travel Photographer of the Year Contest
Lately, I’ve been scooping up photography books left and right, trying to learn as much as I can about the craft. One of the books I’ve enjoyed the most is called Getting Your Shot by National Geographic. Back when I was with My Modern Met, I wrote countless posts about National Geographic’s online photo community called “Your Shot.” This book reveals the inside stories on how those photographs submitted to the Your Shot community were made and it also gives invaluable tips on how to set up your photos.
Here are 16 of my favorite tips.
1. Scenes evolve. Follow your subject until you are out of time or your subject is out of patience. Then go one step more.
2. You don’t have to go far to get a great photo. Keep an eye out for graphic elements that surround you every day.
3. Photograph the people and things you love.
4. Consider using your camera to create a visual diary.
5. Show the relationships between the animals and the people in your photographs by looking for expressions of love, interdependence, and gratitude. Capture the connection.
6. If possible, layer images with movement in the background. This will add weight and interest to your composition.
7. Tourists often take photos they are “supposed to” take but forget to document the real-life elements of their visit. When you travel, immerse yourself in the city and capture mundane moments-such as subway rides-and you’ll have more honest pictures when you return home.
8. Nature is beautiful, but people add a complementary dimension. Consider including people in nature scenes for added interest.
9. Take pictures of the everyday moments in your life. These images end up being some of the most personal and powerful because we approach them with such intimacy.
10. With your eye in the viewfinder, take a minute to look around at what you’re including in your composition before hitting the shutter. Take out what’s distracting or unnecessary in the image.
11. A good place to start when taking pictures is to determine where the best light is in the scene. Then stick around to see what happens in that spot.
12. The famous French photojournalist Henri Cartier-Bresson said that every situation has its decisive moment: you watch as something builds and wait for that peak. Applying the idea of a moment to your photography will make you a more observant and connected image maker. The moment trumps everything. The waiting is the hardest part.
13. Get close, and then get closer. Sometimes your best zoom lens is your feet.
14. Make sure everything in the picture is relevant to the image.
15. Eye contact often makes for more compelling photos of people and animals.
16. Take a step back. Don’t always go for the obvious. Look for different angles. Spend time taking in the scene and allowing it to unfold. Then shoot like mad.
Though the post came out in January, it was new to me. I had somehow missed reading it until now. The article features inspiring words from photographers I’m familiar with like Ami Vitale (I liked her Skillshare video), Sophie Gamand from her Wet Dog series and Robin Schwartz from Amelia and the Animals. (She’s featured in our book, For Love.)
“The hardest internal life lesson as a photographer was that the soul of a photograph trumps technical perfection. I was very insecure about my technical abilities in the beginning, but I had a point of view that was my own. Technical things can be learned over time, but a personal vision, the essence that touches the viewer’s heart in a photograph, comes from a place that is unique and personal in each person, and that cannot be taught.”
I’ve been struggling to get better, technically, with photography but I also need to remember that my personal vision comes from within.
When I made the list 8 Photographers That Made Me Fall in Love With Photography I forgot to add one very important person. Peruvian-born photographer Mario Testino has work that has graced the pages of such publications as Vogue and Vanity Fair and he’s shot for such fashion houses as Versace, Gucci and Burberry. One of his most recent editorials was a breathtakingly beautiful one featuring girl-of-the-moment Gigi Hadid alongside her rockstar boyfriend, Zayn Malik.
Testino has a gift for capturing everyone’s best side, it would be a dream to be photographed by him. The closest most of us will probably get to that is viewing his work at a new exhibition in Copenhagen, Denmark. Starting May 12, visitors will be immersed in Mario Testino: No Limits, a show running over three levels of the gallery. The three overarching themes of his practice will be on view, his fashion and iconic portraiture, royal portraits and austere nudes. How I want to go!
If you’re like me, you hate waiting. As I’ve been getting older, I’ve developed a deeper aversion for standing in line. When it comes to photography, I’d rather snap away tons of shots rather than wait for the perfect moment. In this new book I’m reading, called The Visual Toolbox: 60 Lessons for Stronger Photographs, there’s a good paragraph about this subject.
“Not unlike the wisdom that says if you find beautiful light, go find something in which to photograph it, if you find a great background, it’s worth finding, or waiting for, a great foreground. Life doesn’t stand still. Some places have more movement than others, for sure, and in them it’s worth the waiting, or the going back for. In the others, when no great specific moment is likely to appear, then tap into what it is you love about the empty stage in front of you and make that the star. Get in closer, do studies in color, line, or texture. Do an abstract. Or find a way…to make the photograph about the absence or emptiness. But my dollar’s betting on something happening if you wait long enough-either the missing element will appear, or you’ll see what you didn’t before. It was probably there all along, and you just needed time to perceive it.”
Sometimes, we just have to step back and let the moment appear or, on the flip side, find something beautiful about the scene in front of us.
Hello, I’m Alice Yoo! I’m founder and CEO of Skylar Yoo, a company dedicated to inspiring and empowering women to be bold. We sell apparel, art prints and accessories to the modern feminist.
In my former life, I was editor-in-chief of the art and culture blog My Modern Met, which I founded back in 2007. I curated and wrote about art, design and photography for more than seven years. (In fact, I published over 7,000 articles which were seen by millions of people worldwide.) I’m also co-author of a book called For Love: 25 Heartwarming Celebrations of Humanity, which is on Amazon and wherever books are sold.
I live in southern California along with my husband and my two toddler boys.
This blog is about what I love, the tough experiences that I’ve learned from, and my journey as a second time entrepreneur. Right now, I’m in the midst of a 365 day challenge, to read one book a day. If you share my passions or want to learn some cool new facts, come along for the ride. I hope to inspire, educate and entertain you!