Improve Your iPhone Photography With ShiftCam’s Anamorphic Lens, Selfie Sticks And Tripods

Improve Your iPhone Photography With ShiftCam’s Anamorphic Lens, Selfie Sticks And Tripods

ShiftCam accessories take your iPhone photography skills to the moon!

Believe it or not, your iPhone’s camera has limitations, but certain lens attachments, filters, and expertly crafted grip cases from ShiftCam can take your photography skills to a whole new level. They have an entire line of specialized external lenses, from a 16mm wide-angle to a 1.55x anamorphic lens that will send the clarity and range of your photos to the award stands.

SnapGrip | $70 | ShiftCam

ProGrip is a magnetic phone grip built with phone cameras in mind that doubles as a power bank.

Take photos and video all day long with the ProGrip from ShiftCam that ergonomically lets you stream, carry your phone, and charge through hours-long sessions. The layout rests your fingers and palm in just the right places to keep your hand steady, plus it provides a free-standing charging dock to charge your phone and AirPods or other devices at the same time. Snap into the ProGrip Starter Kit at $149 and keep your hands steady and balanced while taking the best photos ever with your iPhone paired with stunning filters for exceptional results!

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ShiftCam’s SnapGrip bundle includes a tripod/selfie stick, phone grip powerbank, & LED Ring Light for your phone.

Ready to pull it all together for the ultimate bundle? You got it with the SnapGrip Creator Kit bundle at just $129! An all-in-one system that works seamlessly in multiple super cute colors and MagSafe compatible to combine the SnapGrip, SnapPod for an easy mount option, and SnapLight to keep all your streams and photos super bright so you’re always looking your best!

The new LensUltra series range from telephoto lens to macro lens to anamorphic lens.

If you’ve ever feel like your photos can use an upgrade without fiddling with all the software options, you’ll want to check out ShiftCam’s full LensUltra series. Crafted from Flourite with multiple layers of coating, these lenses and filters reduce color fringing to enhance each and every photo, even in the most difficult situations. Macro lenses like their 75mm long-range let you take stunning photos of bugs, flowers, and anything where you need to capture details the iPhone just can’t handle alone.

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The TravelPods are selfie sticks & tripods built for the photographer on the go.

Looking for some space between you and your favorite iPhone when taking photos or streaming on a hike, the TravelPod series has you covered with three standard options, all ready for traveling to summer events. First, you have the selfie TravelPod with a connected magnetic Bluetooth remote control for ease of use. For more stable use to keep the balance in place, choose the TravelPod Pro or TravelPod Mini with a specialized hand grip for added versatility.

VELUX Living Places Copenhagen: An Experimental Living Environment

VELUX Living Places Copenhagen: An Experimental Living Environment

It’s easy to sit back and wait for the right technology to come along to help us help the planet – but maybe we should stop waiting and move forward regardless. How we construct and transform buildings today has an enormous impact on people and communities, as well as the ecosystems that will sustain us tomorrow. The holistic indoor climates created in the process can also play a crucial role in our day-to-day wellness.

Welcome to Living Places Copenhagen, a conceptual living environment that demonstrates how we can improve peoples’ lives – indoor and out – by making better building choices. Located in Jernbanebyen, and brought to life by VELUX, in partnership with EFFEKT, Artelia, and Enemærke & Petersen, Living Places aptly displays how to build sustainably and rethink current processes, while also challenging the industry to speed up innovations and the implementation of responsible, sustainable building solutions.

CLT House Photo: Adam Mørk

light wood sparse interior space

CLT House Photo: Adam Mørk

You might be thinking, “This all sounds great, but what proof do they have?” Well, Living Places has Denmark’s lowest CO2 footprint and a first-class indoor climate, proving that we don’t have to wait for future technology to make better decisions for ourselves and the environment right now. With this experimental mindset at the forefront, the brand partners carefully considered each material, design, and building technique to reduce the environmental impact and improve human health. It all begins with five principles: Healthy, Shared, Simple, Adaptive, and Scalable.

light wood hallway

Timberframe House Photo: Adam Mørk

light wood office

Timberframe House Photo: Adam Mørk

The exhibition mapped emissions projections against the typical Danish house and built the first Living Places project, an exhibition that includes seven prototypes – five open pavilions and two finished full-scale houses – sharing their take on healthy, sustainable homes. Each prototype has its own program that’s been curated to show how we live in homes, in communities, and the role of buildings within the larger picture. By analyzing all stages of the building’s life cycle and understanding the implication of every single design choice, Living Places achieved three times lower carbon footprint emissions and a first-class indoor climate with existing technology.

light wood interior space with cabinets

CLT House Photo: Adam Mørk

light wood office

Timberframe House Photo: Adam Mørk

Did you know that we spend 90% of our time indoors? How our homes are built can affect our physical and mental health on every level. Aside from creating a better living environment for our planet, Living Places is simultaneously forging a path towards a future-oriented society that enhances living conditions for people through an emphasis on Daylight, Thermal Environment, Indoor Air Quality, Acoustics, and Outdoor Connection. By rethinking the way we build, we can potentially have a big impact on the construction industry as a whole.

light wood bedroom

CLT House Photo: Adam Mørk

light wood dining space

CLT House Photo: Adam Mørk

Starting from the ground up, each building component has been optimized for the best price, indoor climate, and carbon footprint, with special focus given to the elements of the building where significant CO2 savings can be achieved. The concept has already received third party verification from AAU BUILD to have a 3x lower CO2 footprint than an average Danish single-family house at 3.8 kg CO2 eq/m2/year.

light wood simple structure with one window and one door

Timberframe House Photo: Adam Mørk

light wood kitchen and dining space

Timberframe House Photo: Adam Mørk

Diagrams show that if Denmark were to build all single-family homes, row houses, and double houses – like Living Places – approximately one million tons of CO2 could be saved every year. It would mark a significant contribution to the country’s climate goals that commit to cutting emissions by 70% by 2030. In order to achieve this goal, the building sector needs to reduce CO2 emissions by 5.8 million tons – Living Places would reduce emissions from the industry by 17% on its own. The project has a pioneering commitment to become Lifetime Carbon Neutral by 2041, taking responsibility for both past and future carbon emissions. So, think bigger. What would be the result if this experiment were put into action worldwide?

light wood simple structure with two skylights and one door

Timberframe House Photo: Adam Mørk

colorful round graphic graph

The Compass Model

The foundation for Living Places is the Compass Model, a free tool created by EFFEKT Architects and VELUX that offers a simple, holistic framework for the planning, ideation, and design of sustainable buildings. The strategic tool outlines seven drivers to help guide the development and building process: Affordable, Local, Flexible, Quality, Environment, Community, and Health. Ultimately, the Compass Model provides collaborators across sectors a framework to follow and building principles to create homes that holistically benefit people and the planet. It can also highlight areas where research is needed, provide an overview of decision implications, and reflect influential design drivers throughout the process.

The Compass Model helps navigate the complex, multifaceted process by assisting designers in making informed, strategic decisions through three incremental steps. First, each new project begins with an evaluation of the ‘Strategic Drivers’ that are most pertinent and can ensure the greatest positive impact. Second, project teams then use 24 ‘Design Drivers’ as input for the concept development based on the brief and needs of the project. Lastly, a set of ‘Performance Drivers’ provides targeted solutions and strategies for the more advanced stages of design.

light wood bedroom

Timberframe House Photo: Adam Mørk

light wood open living space

Timberframe House Photo: Adam Mørk

Living Places also includes the vision and knowledge needed to meet the holistic requirements – biodiversity, local culture, and location – of an Active House. An Active House is evaluated using the three main principles of comfort, energy, and environment. Performance is then measured using the Active House Radar, revealing the level of ambition of each main criteria and its sub-parameters. For a building to be considered an Active House, the level of ambition can be quantified into four levels, where one is the highest level, and four is the lowest and should be equal to or higher than four. Living Places includes all nine parameters of Active House and recommends nearly the best level for each.

light wood open living space

Timberframe House Photo: Adam Mørk

light wood simple structure with one window and one door

CLT House Photo: Adam Mørk

With the building industry accounting for 34% of global energy consumption and 37% of CO2 emissions, the time for action is now. Homes built using the Living Places principles can be constructed at Danish market cost price, whether as single-family homes, row houses, or multifamily units. The next big step will be building the first full-scale Living Places community outside of Copenhagen in 2024/2025.

Living Places Copenhagen is now open and ready to be explored. Visit the exhibition in Jernbanebyen and experience it for yourself! Explore more at buildforlife.velux.com.

Kelly Beall is senior editor at Design Milk. The Pittsburgh-based graphic designer and writer has had a deep love of art and design for as long as she can remember, and enjoys sharing her finds with others. When undistracted by great art and design, she can be found making a mess in the kitchen, consuming as much information as possible, or on the couch with her three pets. Find her @designcrush on social.

Midtown Sculpture Garden Plans Finalized

Midtown Sculpture Garden Plans Finalized
Holdrege, Neb. — A committee has finalized plans to create a sculpture park and public gathering place to enhance downtown Holdrege. The Midtown Sculpture Garden will be constructed at 710 4th Avenue…

Overly Grand Manners: Volker Hermes Exaggerates Historical Portraits with Ostentatious Absurdity

Overly Grand Manners: Volker Hermes Exaggerates Historical Portraits with Ostentatious Absurdity

“Hidden Pickenoy II” (2023). All images © Volker Hermes, shared with permission

Throughout 17th and 18th centuries, Europe’s upper classes entered an era of unprecedented prosperity due to exploding commerce and trade. The wealthy sought to express their status, and portraiture, which had previously been exclusive to royalty, became the perfect indicator of social rank. In England, these paintings became known as Grand Manner works, and the Dutch school counted well-known names like Rembrandt van Rijn, Johannes Vermeer, and Frans Hals among its cohort, still captivating us today at sellout exhibitions. For German artist Volker Hermes, this era of art history provides an endless source of inspiration.

Digital photocollages (previously) playfully reimagine the original sitters in Hermes’ ongoing Hidden Portraits series. Originally depicted by the likes of Dutch painter Nicolaes Pickenoy or French baroque artist Georges de La Tour, the subjects in Hermes’ iterations are overwhelmed by their own garments to the point of absurdity. Brocade masks cover one Elizabethan subject’s eyes, luxuriant robes extend all the way up to foreheads, and lace ruffs engulf the wearers’ faces.

Hermes is drawn to specific characteristics in the original paintings, such as ribbons, which “bring historical images into motion,” he tells Colossal. “At the moment, I’m dealing a lot with Rococo, which is currently getting a lot of attention, after being considered kitsch for a long time.” Depictions of masculinity throughout history have also emerged as a new theme. “I would like to draw attention once again to antiquated forms of masculinity, which actually seemed to be outdated, but are currently becoming—unfortunately—attractive again for many men,” he says.

Through July 8, you can visit Hermes’ solo exhibition Ruff Hood at James Freeman Gallery in London. He will also have work in the group exhibition Rococo Madness! at the National Museum in Wroclaw, Poland, from July 14 through January 14, 2024. Find more on the artist’s website and Instagram.

 

A digitally manipulated Elizabethan portrait showing a woman with a brocade mask covering most of her face, preventing her from seeing.

“Hidden English School” (2023)

A digitally manipulated artwork by Catena showing a robe pulled up so high over the sitter's face that he cannot see.

“Hidden Catena” (2021)

A digitally manipulated artwork by Pourbus showing a regal woman wearing a huge ruff that covers her face, with ribbons tangled all over her head.

“Hidden Anonymous (Pourbus IV)” (2021)

A digitally manipulated artwork by de la Tour of a woman wearing enormous ribbons that cover her face.

“Hidden de la Tour VIII” (2022)

A digitally manipulated artwork by Nattier of a woman wearing a brocade mask with frills.

“Hidden Nattier VI” (2023)

A digitally manipulated artwork by an artist in the Anglo-Dutch School wearing a brocade mask.

“Hidden Anglo-Dutch School” (2023)

A digitally manipulated artwork by Pickenoy showing a woman with a huge ruff engulfing much of her face and gold cord from her dress tangling around her head.

“Hidden Pickenoy II” (2023)

A digitally manipulated artwork by Copley of a man with a green robe so large that is is covering his entire body.

“Hidden Singleton Copley VII” (2023)

A digitally manipulated artwork by Cerroti of a young man with a wide ribbon wound around his head.

“Hidden Siriès Cerroti” (2022)

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $5 per month. The article Overly Grand Manners: Volker Hermes Exaggerates Historical Portraits with Ostentatious Absurdity appeared first on Colossal.

This Hawaiian Artist Weaves Contemporary Style With Ancient Tradition

This Hawaiian Artist Weaves Contemporary Style With Ancient Tradition

Julie Adams remembers when she first saw the fiber artist Marques Hanalei Marzan in action. It was 2016, and they were both attending the Festival of the Pacific Arts in Guam. Marzan was sitting on the ground quietly absorbed in weaving, seemingly unfazed as hundreds milled around him, chatting loudly and blaring music. He was in his zone.

Adams, a curator at the British Museum, just watched. “I was too shy to interrupt him and say hello,” she says. “But in the back of my mind, I was already thinking about how we could commission him to make a piece.” Of course, she had heard of Marzan. Adams considers him “one of the most renowned Hawaiian weavers working today.”

a man is shown from above working on knotting threaded bark

Marzan using a customary method of Hawaiian knotting. He often begins working on a piece before deciding what it will become.

Michelle Mishina

A year later, Adams welcomed Marzan to the British Museum for a private viewing of one of the world’s most important collections of ancient Hawaiian fans. He pored over each item—admiring the skills of the weavers who created them—estimating that only 20 or 30 fans exist today. At that time, the museum was planning an exhibition to commemorate the 250th anniversary of Captain James Cook’s first voyage to the Pacific. Adams asked Marzan to create a crescent-shaped fan, known as a peahi, as part of the tribute, an example of artifacts from that time.

“It was just super overwhelming to get that opportunity to visit, but also then to get that inquiry for a commission to bring a modern voice and perspective back into the collection that they steward, that was so special,” he says. Some 500 years ago, Hawaiian chiefs would trade these fiber fans for European goods. For his modern-day take, Marzan used pandanus, a type of palm-like pine leaf.

a hand holding tree bark in water to wash it

“I was always interested in creative things, drawing, making things with my hands,” says Marzan.

Michelle Mishina

a person holds shredded bark in their hands

Before he can use the pandanus roots in his artwork, Marzan washes the fibers and removes the outer bark from the beaten material.

Michelle Mishina

The tradition of weaving the lau (leaves) from the hala (pandanus) tree was brought to the Aloha State when the first Polynesian settlers arrived in canoes with sails fashioned from the material, according to some historians. Those early Hawaiians realized this resource could be used to craft other essential items like clothing, mattresses and shoes.

There aren’t many who have mastered the technique or the ancient style of weaving used to create the fans. Marzan, 44, who first learned the art as a teenager, is one of the few who possesses that rare expertise. “To create contemporary pieces with these ancient skills is really unique,” says Kilohana Silve, an art critic.

Over the past 25 years, Marzan has perfected multiple fiber-weaving techniques, including plaiting, twining, netting and cord-making.

“He’s using those finely honed skills and creating something that steps forward in time,” says Silve. “That’s very exciting, and it’s wonderful that his work is being recognized beyond Hawaii shores.”


Marzan’s weaving and art have taken him to the Marshall Islands, Canada, New Zealand and American Samoa. In 2018, his craft led him to Paris for the Festival des Arts d’Hawaii. There, five fans he created appeared in an exhibition at Orenda Art International, a gallery known for embracing emerging artists and helping them gain international acclaim.

a hand weaved hanging basket

Marzan carries on the Polynesian and Japanese traditions of his ancestors by creating functional art.

Michelle Mishina

“This show was so important,” says Silve, founder of the Hawaii festival, who lived in Paris for 30 years. “I wanted people out there, especially in important art worlds like Paris or New York or Tokyo, to be aware of the excellent artists that we have in Hawaii. The reactions were just everything that we anticipated. People were fascinated. They were just in awe, because [the weaving technique] is clearly so difficult to do.”

The work was very well received by critics, but Marzan’s artistry isn’t just for aficionados. “It’s one thing for people to go into a gallery and ooh and ahh and say, ‘Oh, c’est magnifique.’ It’s another thing [for them] to, you know, bring out their checkbook and purchase a piece. I was so thrilled to see that his works were all bought,” says Silve.

In addition to their intricate beauty, Marzan’s creations may draw customers because many of his pieces are also functional, like the dresses he made out of pig intestines for the Maoli Arts Movement Wearable Art Show, an annual one-night event in Honolulu that gives native Hawaiian designers a platform to showcase their wearable-art creations.

Just as he draws on the traditional Hawaiian practice of using lau hala to make baskets and shoes, Marzan is inspired by ancient Japanese artisans. Long ago, they created fabric from paper. It was placed under garments to wick away moisture.

Having a “living, active purpose” for his work is important to Marzan, he says. Rather than just gallery exhibition work to hang on a wall, he wants his pieces to come to life.


To some, the items stockpiled in the carport at Marzan’s home, which is in Manoa, on Oahu, might look like clutter: paper cordage, an array of tree branches, homemade fish traps and swordfish bills. However, they are all likely to take on a second life as art.

a man wearing a yellow shirt and blued jeans walks in a tropical setting barefoot

Marzan explores a stream in Honolulu in search of foliage for use in his artistic practice. If he also finds something for dinner, so much the better.

Michelle Mishina

The carport is where Marzan sits cross-legged for hours looping coconut coir, making nets and twining. Meanwhile, birds chirp, gentle trade winds whistle and raindrops offer a soothing sound.

The lush valley, known for its consistent drizzles, is ideal; it’s utterly relaxing, and the moist environment also “allows for the fibers to be more supple and malleable,” Marzan says. “Sometimes when it’s too dry, fibers can get too brittle and break. I think it’s just very conducive to my artwork.”

Marzan also works on his porch, weaving at a small table and on the living room floor. He streams “The Big Bang Theory” for background noise. “I get into that meditative state,” Marzan says. “I just let things go, and my hands just move without any kind of conscious direction or focus.”

On one nearby table sits an elaborate cape made of coconut rope, which would have been suitable for a chief in ancient times. Nearby, a jumbled net form is starting to take the shape of a coral head.

He describes the different materials he incorporates in his art—like berries that grow wild in the mountains and used for dyes, and the paper mulberry used to make kapa (bark cloth)—and how passionate he is about the gathering process. Meanwhile, his fingers are busy looping together paper cordage that will eventually be part of a larger installation piece in an upcoming show.

He doesn’t know what the final product will look like, how large it will be or how long it will take. It all comes together as he goes; there is no plan ahead of time, no sketch, no brainstorm. He allows inspiration to strike along the way.


Marzan was just 5 years old when he made more than 100 one-inch origami cranes for his Japanese grandmother’s 60th birthday party. The feat was an early sign of not only persistence but also exceptional dexterity, qualities that he is renowned for.

“I was always interested in creative things, drawing, making things with my hands, going outside, playing with the mud and making them into forms or different things,” says Marzan, who descends from a long line of artisans. His Filipino ancestors were basketmakers. Silk weaving was done on his Japanese side, and his Hawaiian family is known for canoe-building. However, it was his great-grandmother’s papales, or hats, hanging in his childhood home in Kaneohe, Oahu, that inspired him.

“The hats were a functional necessity for workers, so that was a form of income for her,” Marzan says about the matriarch who passed away before he was born. A skilled weaver, she crafted them to protect those toiling under a hot sun on the coffee plantations on the island of Hawaii. She produced functional art, not unlike her great-grandson.

“Unfortunately, none of her children or grandchildren during her lifetime showed any interest in learning from her. So those skills and insights passed away with her,” Marzan says.

What he didn’t learn at the foot of his elder, he hopes to acquire through experience, practice and determination. He wants to recreate his great-grandmother’s designs.

“I believe in the concept of ancestral memory,” he says, referring to a theory that some experiences leave a genetic imprint and are passed down to descendants. “Sometimes we don’t know why we are doing something, and then it makes sense. What we do today has significant ties to what has happened in the past.”

an artist threads tree bark to create a pattern

Marzan teaches his craft to students of all ages. For 15 years before the Covid-19 pandemic, he offered weekly instruction to elders during his lunch breaks.

Michelle Mishina

When he first worked with the lau hala, manipulating it felt almost innate. “I just attribute it to my great-grandmother. She just was guiding my hands,” he says.

Today, Marzan can craft hats almost identical to his matriarch’s. However, the starting pattern, called the Honaunau piko (center), unique to her community, is still a mystery.

That lost knowledge motivates Marzan to instruct others. He often teaches workshops to students of all ages. “This skill that I’ve shared with them, it’s not for them to keep to themselves,” says Marzan. In fact, he challenges each of his students to teach at least one other person how to weave “so this skill gets passed on to someone and is available to future generations.”

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Polish photographers take art to new heights at Drone Photo Awards 2023

Polish photographers take art to new heights at Drone Photo Awards 2023
image
Polish photographers wowed judges with their stunning birds-eye photography at the Drone Photo Awards 2023, an annual international competition dedicated to aerial photography.
Drone Photo Awards 2023

Polish photographers have taken their art to new heights with their stunning creations being awarded at the Drone Photo Awards 2023, an annual international competition dedicated to aerial photography.

The contest received thousands of submissions from countries around the world, with gongs handed out in nine categories including Urban, Abstract and Weddings.

Warsaw’s Sebastian Piórek took first place in the Urban section with his incredible photograph entitled Playground.

Described as being a ‘pearl from the ground and also from the air’ the photo shows a “playground full of joy hidden somewhere deep in the south of Poland” which “shows its beauty in the first flash of sun from above.”

image‘Playground’ by Sebastian Piórek took first place in the Urban category.Sebastian Piórek/ Drone Photo Awards 2023

Sebastian who specializes in capturing minimalistic shots of architecture and landscapes says intention is “to prompt the audience to perceive reality from a fresh perspective, encouraging contemplation on time and existence.”

Recently, his photographs have been published in renowned publications such as “100 [HUNDRED] Best Selected,” “Photography in the Visual Culture,” “We Contemporary 2022,” and “Black, White & Infinite Colors.”

Runner-up in the Urban category was landscape photographer Paweł Jagiełło with his haunting ‘Sunken Church Tower’.

The 14th-century church tower in Italy stands as a poignant reminder of the sunken village of Curon Venosta. In 1950, the entire village was submerged following the construction of a dam, resulting in the creation of the artificial basin known as Lake Resia.

Today, only the church tower remains.

image‘Sunken church tower’ by landscape photographer Paweł Jagiełło was runner up in the Urban category.Paweł Jagiełło/ Drone Photo Awards 2023

Paweł, who is also from Warsaw said: “I have a deep passion for photography and combine it with my love for travel. Nature serves as a constant source of inspiration for me, as it never ceases to amaze with its beauty, vibrant colors, and remarkable diversity.

“Throughout the past few years, I have been fortunate to explore and photograph numerous breathtaking and distinctive locations across the globe.

“Through my photography, my aim is to capture the essence of these exceptional places and share them with a wide audience.”

Meanwhile, Marek Biegalski’s eye-opening aerial shot entitled Arctic Forest was runner-up in the Abstract category.

imageMarek Biegalski’s eye-opening aerial shot entitled Arctic Forest was runner-up in the Abstract category.Marek Biegalski/ Drone Photo Awards 2023

Capturing incredible glacial rivers while exploring Iceland, Marek said they were called ‘”braided river systems, as they often resemble an intricate jumble of patterns, intertwining in an almost inexplicable fashion.”

He added: “My work captures sublime moments of light and surroundings, resulting from meticulous planning and preparation. I’m looking for patterns within the landscape and the hidden link between reality and imagination.”

Now living in Ireland where he collaborates with Cannon Ireland, Marek has organised a series of photographic workshops in Norway, Italy, the Czech Republic, Poland, Sweden, France, and Ireland, the award-winning photographer has also been published in eminent titles including  National Geographic.

In the Wedding category, Krzysztof Krawczyk from Bełchatów scooped a hattrick.

In first place was his beautifully romantic ‘Swim in the stars’.

imageKrzysztof Krawczyk/ Drone Photo Awards 2023

imageKrzysztof Krawczyk/ Drone Photo Awards 2023

imageIn the Wedding category, Krzysztof Krawczyk from Bełchatów scooped a hattrick with his first place ‘Swim in the stars’, a Highly Commended  ‘Abstraction in Ferns’ and a Commended recognition for ‘Road Among Nothing’.Krzysztof Krawczyk/ Drone Photo Awards 2023

Describing the image on its website, the Drone Awards wrote: “Under the heavy clouds, thousands of dry leaves glisten like stars from this vantage point, while gentle waves ripple beneath. The bride and groom find themselves in a boat adorned with beautiful flowers, creating a truly romantic scene.”

Krzysztof also received a Highly Commended recognition for his ‘Abstraction in Ferns’ showing a couple on a white bed surrounded by a sea of green, and a Commended recognition for ‘Road Among Nothing’.

Set on the island of Lanzarote, the image shows an “amazing slow sunrise and only two people among nothing. Volcanic island painted with the first rays of the sun.”

Starting his adventure with photography in 2013, Krzysztof is now considered one of the Top Three wedding photographers in Poland.

To see all of this year’s winners and awards click here.