CONTACT Yearbook 2021

Page 92

Judging for the 2021 Royal Air Force Photographic Competition took place in October, with several categories producing stunning results

92

This year’s Royal Air Force Photographic Competition had seven categories – up from last year’s four, thanks to COVID-19. The categories were Personnel, Current RAF Equipment, RAF Operations and Exercises, the Mallett Student Trophy, Section Portfolio, Video and, of course, the Peoples’ Choice. Nearly 1500 images and more than 50 videos were submitted across the competition’s categories, with the best nine images chosen by the judges going head-to-head in the Peoples’ Choice category, where the general public could vote via the Royal Air Force’s official Facebook page – and the winner was SAC Dafydd Lewis’ Flying Home (above right). With space limited, the “CONTACT Editor’s Choices” are presented in this spread, with our ‘winner’ and second place in the Peoples Choice, Corporal Lee ‘Matty’ Matthews’ photo ‘GRIFFIN’ published on page 9 of this yearbook. Adding to that ‘Current RAF Equipment’ category win (and the “CONTACT Editor’s Favourite”), Corporal Matthews also won the RAF Operations and Exercises, and the Video categories. Other winners were SAC Craig Williams in the Personnel category; the Joint Air Delivery Test and Evaluation Unit Photo Section won the Section Portfolio; and, SAC Amelia Turnbull took out the Mallett Student Trophy. This year’s judges, with a mountain of quality work to get through, were WO2 Jamie Peters, British Army photographer, LPhot Dan Shepherd Royal Navy photographer, Imperial War Museum Senior Curator of Photography Hilary Roberts, editor at The Warzone blog Thomas Newdick, picture editor of The Telegraph Matthew Fearn, head of the Royal Air Force photographic trade, WO Andy Malthouse and Mrs Pam Mallett. Hilary Roberts said this year’s entries reflected the RAF’s huge contribution to British life as well as its core role of keeping British skies safe. “Congratulations to all winners and entrants on an excellent standard of photography in an exceptionally challenging year,” she said. WO2 Peters said picking the top images from the many submitted was a real challenge. “The standard of entries were as technically excellent as they were varied, showing the diverse range of tasks the RAF and its photographers do all over the world,” WO2 Peters said. “From support with the COVID pandemic at home to operations abroad, the photographers have captured it all. “As a fellow military photographer, I looked for images that made me wish I had taken them and there were many that fell into that bracket, which made my job all the more difficult. “Well done to everyone who entered.” Featuring the best from CONTACT Air Land & Sea – Australia’s best boots-on-the-ground military e-magazine


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