SkyPixel Picks Best Aerial & Drone Imagery of 2015

News2016-01-07

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Las Vegas, USA (January 6, 2016) – SkyPixel, the world’s most-popular aerial photography community run in cooperation with DJI, on Thursday announced the top aerial and drone images of 2015 to conclude a two-month global competition.

The 2015 SkyPixel Photo of the Year went to “Surge,” a photograph of a lone swimmer shot by Kirk Hille. SkyPixel’s blue-ribbon judging panel selected his photo and other category winners from over 10,000 entries submitted from 146 countries.

Ken Geiger, Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer and a SkyPixel competition judge, said “Surge” offered “a unique viewpoint, lovely color and composition” and “made an emotional connection with me, making me wish to be part of the scene.”

For his winning entry, Hille will receive a DJI Inspire 1 RAW, a DJI Osmo, a one-year subscription to Adobe Cloud and a Zeiss VR One – prizes worth nearly $10,000.

In addition to the grand prize, SkyPixel picked first-, second- and third-place selections in three different categories – “beauty,” “unique dronies” and “drones in use.” Professional and enthusiast entries were judged separately. All winning entries can be viewed here*: www.skypixel.com/events/photocontest

Hi-res photos can be downloaded here*https://goo.gl/FCqiIg

The SkyPixel competition also awarded prizes to photos designated as “most-popular.” Winners were chosen by the number of “likes” they received on SkyPixel.

“The significant number of entries is a clear sign of the rising popularity of drone photography and the unique perspective they offer creators and viewers,” said Sheldon Schwartz, Executive Creative Director.

SkyPixel collaborated on the 2015 competition with Conde Nast Traveler, SonyAdobeZeissHuawei, and Lowepro.

The judging panel included Geiger and fellow Pultizer Prize winner Jahangir Razmi of Iran, as well as award-winning and popular nature, wildlife and landscape photographers Manish MamtaniSudhir Shivaram, Wang Jianjun and Matt Waite, a journalism professor at University of Nebraska-Lincoln and founder of the university’s Drone Journalism Lab.

SkyPixel, which has become the world’s largest online community for aerial-imagery enthusiasts, also said Thursday it launched a revamped website. Version 2.0 of the site features an updated user interface, cleaner look and many new features, including aerial photography tips. The platform will support 360-degree photography with virtual reality later this year.

Meet the New SkyPixel video: www.youtube.com/watch?-2U7KxarR0

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