The winners of the National Geographic 2019 Travel Photo Contest have been chosen from thousands of entries and were announced this week.
National Geographic is famed for transporting their readers through its images, but through this contest the readers get a chance to share their own photographs with the magazine.
The photos had to be a glimpse into the world of nature, cities or people. Each had to tell a story of place.
The grand prize winner, Weimin Chu, says the scene in his ‘Winter in Greenland’ image felt harmonious. ‘The whole land was covered by white, cold snow, and the blue tint at dusk made it even cooler. But the light from the windows, street lights and the family of three made the world warm again,’ says Chu.
‘I love the contrast and mood of this scene. I was busy taking continuous pictures at that time, trying to capture the best moment.’
The grand prize winner will receive over R100,000 and their winning image will be published on the National Geographic Travel Instagram account.
The first-place winner will receive R37,000, the second-place winner will receive R20,000 and the third-place will receive R11,000.
The contest judged the image, not the camera used, so they received entries taken on mobile phones to SLR cameras. However, the photos had to have been taken within the past two years.
Some of the images may look like a dream, but images were not allowed to be manipulated. Elements could not be added, removed, rearranged, inverted or distorted. Only minor colour correction and cropping was accepted. HDR and panoramas were accepted.
‘Submit photographs that are real. We want to see the world through your eyes, not through the excessive use of photo editing tools,’ was the directive given on the contest page.
Browse the other winning images and read the photographers’ captions to learn more about how they got the shot and why they took it:
Feature image: Weimin Chu/ National Geographic.