iPhone Photography Awards 2013 Pictures

Here you can see the winners name and there amazing photos of the competition of mobile photography iPhone Photography Awards 2013. One of the most popularsmartphone in the world of photographing for several years the iPhone. 

Since 2007, photographers who shoot on the iPhone can send their works to the contest iPhone Photography Awards. Professional committee chooses the most spectacular and unusual photos taken with a smartphone from Apple. One of the main conditions of the contest – the minimum artwork. 

Formally, the use of filters and programs that enhance the quality of the frame is not prohibited, but experts prefer the skillful use of the camera combined with the good work of the author’s choice of camera angle, lighting, shot composition. Thanks to the skill of the photographer (well, we can see here the progress of the new models of iPhone camera) many of the shots look as if shot on professional equipment. By the way this is not the first year in the competition where not only fans were involved, but also professional photographers. The prize was a portrait of a horse on a background of the sky.

Amazing Illustration BY Jonathan Bartlett

Jonathan grew up in a small Pennsylvania town outside of Harrisburg and currently lives and works in Brooklyn, NY. He has done work for a wide variety of clients in various markets, receiving awards and recognitions from American Illustration, The Society of Illustrators, Spectrum Fantasy Art, 3x3 Magazine, and The Art Directors Club. He has an MFA from the School of Visual Arts, Illustration as Visual Essay program.













The Fine Art of Barbie

French artist Jocelyne Grivaud re-created famous artworks using the Mattel doll, and her series of images charts how the ideal female form has changed over the decades









Via

Illustration By Sanna Annukka

Sanna Annukka is a half Finnish/half English illustrator and printmaker working in London for the agency Big Active. She graduated with BA hons in Illustration from the University of Brighton in July of 2005. Her work is inspired by her time spent in Finland as a child and the reknown Kalevala Finnish collection of folklore songs. Though only a small portion of her work is typographic in nature, her illustration and design sensibilities make for noteworthy typographic creations.


Illustration by Vania Zouravliov

Russian-born Vania Zouravliov was inspired from an early age by influences as diverse as The Bible, Dante’s Divine Comedy, early Disney animation and North American Indians. Something of a child prodigy in his homeland, he was championed by many influential classical musicians including Ashkenazi, Spivakov and Menuhin. He even had television programs made about him and was introduced to famous communist artists, godfathers of social realism, who told him that his work was from the Devil.









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