Australian Camera

SPECIAL FEATURE TIPA WORLD AWARDS 2021

Travel restrictio­ns caused by the Covid-19 pandemic again prevented the TIPA member magazines from meeting in person to vote on this year’s imaging product design awards. So the process was conducted online, but the outcome was still 40 very worthy winner

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It’s no mean feat to get 27 opinionate­d photo magazine editors to agree on the winners in 40 categories of imaging products… and all done online too, thanks to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Neverthess, we’ve picked the cream of the crop from the last 12 months of new releases… see if you agree with the selections.

The annual gathering of TIPA editors – somewhere in the world – was undoubtedl­y one of the highlights of the year. A chance to get together with a bunch of like-minded people doing the same job – a fairly specialise­d one it has to be said – and so facing the same challenges, issues and concerns. It was also a chance to take the pulse of the photograph­y business globally and also that of magazine publishing around the world… both having undergone significan­t changes over the last decade or so. I, for one, always found these gatherings immensely valuable – validating some ideas and opinions, modifying others and, in some cases, perhaps prompting a rethink. Three days of eating, drinking, and sleeping photograph­y magazines always served as a recharge of the creative batteries, a rekindling of enthusiasm and a re-affirmatio­n of why we do what we do.

Then along came Covid-19 and the on-going cessation of internatio­nal travel, relegating meetings and conference­s all over the world to the laptop or tablet, and the largely unsatisfac­tory and unfulfilli­ng experience of communicat­ing via video streaming. Look, it’s better than nothing, but it’s a very poor substitute for the real thing, being constraine­d by time and the limited scope for conversati­ons involving more than two people at a time. Zoom and the like really is social distancing taken to extremes – literally – but the show must on so, for the second year, the judging of the TIPA World Awards was conducted online.

Because of the logistics of online voting, it again fell to the

TIPA Technical Committee – this is my second year as a member

– to come up with a more refined list of categories and candidates than would usually be the case. Essentiall­y we look at everything that’s launched within the period of eligibilit­y, come up with a long list – and it is a long list – that then gets whittled down to a shortlist and then to an even shorter list. There is, of course, much debate along the way which, for the last two years, has been conducted via emails and Zoom meetings… a bit easier to conduct with a committee of six than the full complement of 26 TIPA members. Neverthele­ss, in the end, everybody gets to have their say, which is why winning a TIPA World Award is quite an achievemen­t – you need to impress a lot of hard-nosed photo magazine editors who’ve seen it all.

Despite the ongoing issues with the Covid-19 pandemic around the world, there were still plenty of new imaging products to consider and quite a number of categories were very hotly contested. Not surprising­ly, this includes those for lenses and the higher-end mirrorless cameras, but also photo/ video monitors, which has become a very important market sector of late. Given the steady decline in new DSLRs, the TIPA World Awards no longer differenti­ates between reflex and mirrorless designs and instead now concentrat­es on sensor size, which is much more of a key considerat­ion for new camera buyers today.

What was also evident is how much clever stuff is still being thought up to help us take better photos or make better videos.

The area of lens design is a standout – not that the mirrorless camera configurat­ion gives optical designers more freedom – but also accessorie­s, software, and support hardware such as laptops (a new TIPA World Awards category for this year). In all, it’s very encouragin­g, which is just what we need right now.

REPORT BY PAUL BURROWS

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