IPhone Photography Awards Gold Prize Winner Used iPhone X

Published by Robert Granstone on

IPhone Photography Awards Gold Prize Winner Used iPhone X — iPhone

What You Need to Know

  • IPhone Photography Awards Grand Prize won with iPhone 15 Pro volcano photo emphasizing timing and natural light.
  • Gold Prize winner used iPhone X, a several-generation-old device no longer sold new, competing at top level.
  • IPhone X’s competitive success demonstrates mobile photography ceiling has risen across all device tiers, not just flagships.
  • Contest results suggest hardware upgrades less necessary for serious photography than Apple’s marketing emphasizes.

The iPhone Photography Awards has spent nearly two decades arguing that hardware matters less than the person holding it. The 2026 results, announced this week, make that case again, though with a few wrinkles worth examining.

The Grand Prize went to Robyn Jensen for a volcano eruption photo captured in the Cayman Islands on an iPhone 15 Pro. The image leads with timing and natural light rather than computational tricks, which is either inspiring or a quiet rebuke to Apple’s ongoing camera marketing, depending on your perspective.

The Gold Prize adds a sharper data point. Gellért Gombai shot his winning black-and-white image of two children sleeping under the shadow of a badminton racket on an iPhone X, a device that is now several generations old and no longer sold new. That a phone from that era can still compete at this level says something about how the ceiling for mobile photography has risen across the board, not just at the flagship tier.

Other winners used more current hardware, including the iPhone 16 Pro and iPhone 16 Pro Max. The contest spans categories including:

  • Animals, architecture, and landscape
  • Nature, portrait, and travel
  • Still life

What the Results Suggest Going Forward

Apple has leaned heavily into camera capabilities as a selling point for its Pro lineup, with features like improved telephoto reach and larger sensors arriving incrementally each cycle. The fact that a Gold Prize winner used an iPhone X does not undercut that strategy commercially, but it does complicate the narrative that upgrading is necessary for serious photography. With iPhone 18 Pro pricing already drawing attention, the awards serve as an accidental counterargument to the annual upgrade cycle.

The next entry deadline for the awards is March 31, 2027.

Source: Apple Announces iPhone Photography Awards 2026 Winners (macobserver.com)

Categories: News

Robert Granstone

Robert Granstone is the Editor-in-Chief of Guide4Mac. A veteran tech journalist with a decade of experience covering Apple, he specializes in making complex Mac and iPhone workflows accessible to everyone. Robert’s editorial philosophy is built on transparency and hands-on testing. Follow his latest insights into the Apple ecosystem here.

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