Here Are The Winners Of The 2019 International Landscape Photographer Of The Year Contest (30 Pics)
The International Landscape Photographer of the Year contest has just announced its 2019 winners, and their pics are the perfect reminders of just how diverse and beautiful our Mother Earth really is.
This year, the competition had 3,403 entries from 840 participants. The cut-off score this year was 85.2%, but the organizers said there were hundreds of images scoring above 80% which could happily sit alongside the best photos in the book they're publishing this year.
After carefully reviewing all of the submitted landscape photos, the six photo contest judges, including last year’s winner, Adam Gibbs, determined that Oleg Ershov from Russia was to be named the International Landscape Photographer of the Year 2019 while Magali Chesnel from France took home The International Landscape Photograph of the Year award.
More info: internationallandscapephotographer.com
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Antorno Lake, Dolomiti, Italy By Miller Yao
"There is $10,000 in cash prizes in the photography awards for the best Photograph of the Year (single shot, 1st, 2nd, 3rd) and best Photographer of the Year (portfolio of four photographs, 1st, 2nd, 3rd), and there are five special subject awards (Wildlife in Landscape, Abstract Aerial, Snow & Ice, Lone Tree, Heavenly Cloud) which receive a one-meter print from the high-end photo lab and framer, Created For Life," the organizers explained. "All 11 winners of the photography contest receive a physical copy of the annual Awards book, proudly printed by Momento Pro."
Eastern Sierra, California, USA By Carlos Cuervo
The landscape photography entries presented for judging had to be photographic in origin (taken with a camera) but there were no limits on post-production. This means the participants were allowed to use HDR, tone mapping, cloning, composites, stitching, focus-stacking, etc. The only rule was that all post-production must've been the work of that particular photographer. They couldn't have someone else edit or work on their images.
Page, Arizona, USA By Craig Bill
Madeira, Portugal, By Anke Butawitsch
Second Place: Bonaire, Dutch Carribean By Sander Grefte
Second Place: Badain Jaran Desert, China By Yang Guang
Hangandifoss, Iceland By Kai Hornung
Third Place: Sharqiya Sands Desert, Oman By Peter Adam Hoszang
Hoh Rainforest, Washington, USA By Blake Randall
Slovenia By Jaka Ivancic
Never seen this landscape in winter, wow! (but it's gorgeous in summer as well, absolutely breathtaking :) There's still so much to see in Europe...).
Third Place: Grizzly Lake, Yukon, Canada By Blake Randall
Second Place: Badain Jaran Desert, China By Yang Guang
Barents Sea, Teriberka, Russia By Sergey Semenov
This almost looks apocalyptic. It would make a good book cover for a apocalyptic dystopia.
The Snow And Ice Award: Central Balkan, Bulgaria By Veselin Atanasov
Torres Del Paine National Park, Chile By Yuekai Du
The Heavenly Cloud Award: Pacex Rocket Exhaust Plume, Sierra Nevada, California, USA By Brandon Yoshizawa
Lençóis Maranhenses, Brazil By Ignacio Palacios
Wow I love how big this scene is compared to the one palm tree!
Wangu Falls, Northern Taiwan By Kuo Zei Yang
Floe Lake, Kootenay National Park, British Columbia, Canada By Matt Jackisch
The Lone Tree Award: Madeira, Portugal By Anke Butawitsch
Bromo Volcano National Park, Indonesia By Tony Wang
Been there. It is truly breathtaking. Lots of small volcanoes on a fast sand sea.
Winner: Fleswick Bay, England By Oleg Ershov
Bronte Beach, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia By Gergo Rugli
Tumpak Sewu Waterfall, Indonesia By Tony Wang
The Wildlife In Landscape Award: West Mongolia By Ricardo Da Cunha
Kaohsiung, Taiwan By Peng-Gang Fang
North Caineville Mesa, Capitol Reef National Park, Utah, USA By Armand Sarlangue
Oh my God the colours in the sky are so beautiful!
Winner: Bláfellsá, Iceland By Oleg Ershov
Kimberley, Western Australia By Mat Beetson
Mount Baker, Washington, United States By Matt Jackisch
those pictures are so heavily edited, they should be called drawings
These photos are all so serene and calming. My work makes me pretty anxious so this post was definitely appreciated this morning.
Bored Panda - You seriously need to do something about all the SPAM!!! There are 7 comments here and 5 of them are SPAM! Please put a stop to this.
It's really sad that photos that actually are edited to look like how it does to your eyes when you are there almost never make it to any of these lists. The vast, vast majority are incredibly edited (I've done landscape photography for years so I know exactly how to achieve these looks). It just makes me sad that landscapes have joined everything else in how it's totally fine to make them look like a painting or a cartoon in 8K. There should be a separate category for those. #4 (currently) Madeira, Portugal, By Anke Butawitsch is a good example. These pics should have to be posted next to the sooc versions. Killcare Heights, Australia By Tony Law (currently #40) is even worse. Have fun trying to get a bright light source, that sky and foreground in one shot with nothing blown out. No sensor is THAT kind of dynamic range no matter how ISO invariant it is. It's HDR.
Agree, everything is pretense, nothing true, factual, or genuine is valued and appreciated. I only hope that these photographs will bring attention to the issue of conservation of the environment, the nature, even though they were adapted.
Load More Replies...I was thinking that these all look like they couldn’t possibly be real. Then I read these comments explaining that they’re edited. That’s disappointing, but helpful to know.
Thank you for sharing these. My eyes and heart are very happy.
Thanks Panda , I enjoyed these. Even the ones that I didn't have a clue about what they were.
those pictures are so heavily edited, they should be called drawings
These photos are all so serene and calming. My work makes me pretty anxious so this post was definitely appreciated this morning.
Bored Panda - You seriously need to do something about all the SPAM!!! There are 7 comments here and 5 of them are SPAM! Please put a stop to this.
It's really sad that photos that actually are edited to look like how it does to your eyes when you are there almost never make it to any of these lists. The vast, vast majority are incredibly edited (I've done landscape photography for years so I know exactly how to achieve these looks). It just makes me sad that landscapes have joined everything else in how it's totally fine to make them look like a painting or a cartoon in 8K. There should be a separate category for those. #4 (currently) Madeira, Portugal, By Anke Butawitsch is a good example. These pics should have to be posted next to the sooc versions. Killcare Heights, Australia By Tony Law (currently #40) is even worse. Have fun trying to get a bright light source, that sky and foreground in one shot with nothing blown out. No sensor is THAT kind of dynamic range no matter how ISO invariant it is. It's HDR.
Agree, everything is pretense, nothing true, factual, or genuine is valued and appreciated. I only hope that these photographs will bring attention to the issue of conservation of the environment, the nature, even though they were adapted.
Load More Replies...I was thinking that these all look like they couldn’t possibly be real. Then I read these comments explaining that they’re edited. That’s disappointing, but helpful to know.
Thank you for sharing these. My eyes and heart are very happy.
Thanks Panda , I enjoyed these. Even the ones that I didn't have a clue about what they were.