Early morning flog clings to the autumn landscape in the UK. Photo: Richard Butler |
Editor’s Note: In recent months, we’ve introduced a series of Editors’ Photo Challenges to spotlight the exceptional photography of DPReview readers. Based on your feedback, we’re making some changes to these challenges to create a more predictable schedule and to allow for broader participation:
Monthly Challenges: Going forward, we’ll host one challenge each month. Themes will be announced at the beginning of each month, with winners revealed by month’s end.
Photo Eligibility: To allow for more participation, future challenges will be open to photos taken at any time, regardless of when they were captured.
Thanks for sharing your work with us – it’s an honor to feature your talent and creativity on the site.
The theme for our November Editors’ photo challenge is ‘Fog’.
Fog provides endless creative possibilities for photography, from soft, diffused landscapes to ghostly cityscapes. It can add an ethereal quality to a scene that transforms the familiar into something magical. Show us the magic and mystery of mist with your favorite fog photos.
For this challenge, shoot and submit one or more photos that embody this month’s theme. Each person can enter up to three photos.
How it works
DPReview editors will review every photo you upload to an Editors’ Challenge. We’ll publish our favorites in a gallery on the DPReview homepage at the end of the month.
How to submit your photos
Submissions will open on November 3, and you have until Saturday, November 9 (GMT), to submit entries. User voting will begin after that and will help inform DPReview Editors’ picks, but will not select them. They are one factor in our evaluation of submissions.
Details
You must follow the rules below to be eligible to be featured in our gallery of winners.
Processing:
- Post-processing is allowed, but this is a photo contest, not a post-processing contest. Please, no composite, altered or fabricated images..
Additional rules:
- Photos must be at least 2400 pixels long on one edge.
- Include a title for your photo.
- Include a caption that tells us the story behind the photo, including when and where it was taken.
- Share what gear was used and your camera settings. If you used an interchangeable lens camera, please tell us what lens was used.
- Tell us about any edits you made in post-processing beyond basic things like white balance, exposure adjustments, etc.
- Our standard copyright and privacy terms and conditions policy applies.
Author:
This article comes from DP Review and can be read on the original site.