The internet may be a harrowing and cold place at times, but we can always rely on solid cute content of our favourite fuzzy critters to warm our hearts.
If there’s one thing in life worth celebrating, it’s pets.
The winning entries from the Drone Photo Awards 2022 are a testament to the technology’s capabilities.
Whether it’s baby animals playing silly buggers or adults being goofballs, the early entries for the Comedy Wildlife Photography Awards show the lighter side of nature.
The aim of the competition is, most heart-warmingly, to raise awareness about animal welfare and the vital role that pets play in people’s lives.
The winning shots from the 2021 Comedy Pet Photo Awards include pure joy and happiness from dogs, cats, horses, and even two baby chicks.
Studies have shown that just looking at photos of nature lowers work stress levels. Consider the next few minutes an investment in yourself.
The competition has been running for 13 years out of The Royal Observatory Greenwich, with more than 4 500 entries this year.
This year’s Drone Photo Awards cover eight categories- urban, wildlife, sports, people, nature, abstract, and wedding- each with incredible aerial shots worth pondering.
This year, judges have received in excess of 7 000 photos from right around the globe, since narrowed down to 42 finalists.
The winner of the first Africa Photo Awards comes from Pretoria and he had some pretty stiff competition to overcome.
A frosted deer, lions in storms, competitive bees and a mid-air stout are just a few of the breathtaking images to feature in the 60th Wildlife Photographer of the Year competition.
The finalists and shortlisted entries in the prestigious Sony World Photography Awards 2024 are like portals into others’ existence, showing a Slovakian spa facility, a German finger wrestling champion, a mother’s love, and a pair of desert foxes rollicking in the sand.
“We invite the public to join the jury and vote for their favourite; whether breathtaking beauty or a powerful story, it’s sure to be a difficult decision!” said Dr Douglas Gurr, Director of the Natural History Museum.
It’s pretty cool to see astronomy pros and hobbyists alike share some of their incredible shots of the pretty things up top in the Astronomy Photographer of the Year awards.
The winners of this year’s World Nature Photography Awards have been announced, with many shots hailing from South Africa, Zimbabwe, and Kenya.
Colourful bursts of fireworks, festival goers scuttling for a sip of booze, and a person mimicking a tree all feature in this year’s list of national winners for the 2023 Sony World Photography Awards.
The Natural History Museum has selected 25 photos that will be voted on by the public to win the Wildlife Photographer of the Year People’s Choice Award.
Blue bulls taking flight and penguins without heads make up some of this year’s Comedy Wildlife Photography Awards finalists.
Antonio Denti’s ‘The Kid of Mosul’ won the standalone Photographer of the Year award, revealing “a moment of tenderness in the dusty rubble of war”.
These winning shots cast a completely different perspective onto the world, making you think and consider things from a new angle.
Conservation through humour – that’s the focus of the Comedy Wildlife Photography Awards, “most probably the world’s funniest photography competition”.
The best single shots from the category winners in the Open competition of the Sony World Photography Awards 2022 have just been revealed.
Three finalists were selected in each category, and their striking images covered a few salient issues from the past couple of years or so.
Take a moment to delve into the winner of one of the largest annual photography competitions on Earth – the Sony World Photography Awards.
A monkey in a compromising position has taken top spot as the overall winner in the 2021 Comedy Wildlife Photography Awards.
The competition, run by the German Society for Nature Photography, saw 19 00 entries.
The Weather Photographer of the Year competition is now in its sixth year, having seen everything from rain, to shine, to snow, and storms.
The photographers who submitted their snaps for this year’s Street Photographers Foundation Awards managed some incredible shots.
From around the world, ranging from Western Australia to Norway, photographers are capturing the state of our oceans, showing animals and plants in their natural environment.