Share your best iPhone Night mode photos

Apple is starting the new year by celebrating more captivating ways to shoot on iPhone with an all-new Night mode photo challenge. Users are invited to share their impressive Night mode images captured with iPhone 11, iPhone 11 Pro and iPhone 11 Pro Max.

Beginning today through January 29, Apple is in search of the most stunning Night mode shots from users around the world. A panel of select judges will evaluate submissions to reveal five winning photos on March 4.
 
The winning photos will be celebrated in a gallery on Apple Newsroom, apple.comand Apple Instagram (@apple). They may also appear in digital campaigns, at Apple Stores, on billboards, or in a third-party photo exhibition.

iPhone 11, iPhone 11 Pro and iPhone 11 Pro Max offer a best-in-class camera experience and bring major advancements in photography to the world’s most popular camera. iPhone 11 features a breakthrough dual-camera system and iPhone 11 Pro features a triple-camera system, both deeply integrated into iOS 13, with intuitive and powerful new tools to enable every customer to shoot like a professional. All iPhone 11 models feature a new Wide sensor with 100 percent Focus Pixels that enables Night mode, delivering low-light photos captured in indoor and outdoor environments never before possible on iPhone. This is in addition to an all-new Ultra Wide camera, next-generation Smart HDR, and upgraded Portrait mode experience. 

Tips for using Night mode: 

  • Night mode automatically comes on in low-light environments. If the yellow Night mode icon is showing, you’re shooting with Night mode.
  • Night mode determines capture time based on the scene, and displays this time in the Night mode icon. You can tap on the Night mode icon and adjust the slider to Max to extend the capture time.
  • Try propping up your iPhone or using a tripod for a longer capture time at the darkest time of night.

Meet the Judges 

Malin Fezehai (US)
Malin is a New York-based photographer and visual reporter. Capturing images in over 30 countries, Malin has shot for The New York Times, TIME, Nike, Malala Fund and the United Nations, among others. In 2015, she was the recipient of the Wallis Annenberg Prize and became the first-ever honoree to receive a World Press Photo Award for an image shot on iPhone.

Tyler Mitchell (US)
Tyler is a Brooklyn-based photographer and filmmaker working across many genres to explore and document a new aesthetic of blackness. He is regularly published in avant-garde magazines and commissioned by prominent fashion houses. In 2018, he made history as the first black photographer to shoot the cover of American Vogue with Beyoncé as the esteemed subject and last year he had his first solo museum exhibition titled “I Can Make You Feel Good” at Foam Fotografiemuseum Amsterdam.

Sarah Lee (UK)
Sarah studied English Literature at University College London (UCL) in the late 1990s and used the time not spent in libraries to train herself as a photographer. She has worked for the Guardian and Observer since 2000 and specializes in portraiture, features and the Arts. Sarah has a book out this month called “West of West,” about the end of Route 66 and frontierism, and is working on a long-term series about London and night journeys called “Tender are the Nighthawks.” Sarah is an official BAFTA photographer and a fellow of the British American Project, and also a fellow of the Royal Society of Arts

.Alexvi Li (China)
Alexvi is a long time iPhone photographer and Artist who captures photo and video, creating thematic art projects. His work can be seen in a variety of major institutions and galleries, and he has been awarded a Fine Art Photography Award for “Peking Apartments” along with the Photobook Awards Martin Parr Edition for his photobook “Lonely Planet,” entirely shot on iPhone. He also recently shot “Objects in the Mirror Are Closer Than They Appear” entirely on iPhone 11 Pro.

Darren Soh (Singapore)
Darren is a full-time independent photographer who specializes in architecture and landscape. His many accolades include a Commonwealth Photographic Award and the Prix de la Photographie, Paris. He began his career as a photojournalist, and has seen works published and exhibited internationally. He is best known for his documentation of vernacular and public housing structures in Singapore. He often shares his iPhone photography on his Facebook page and was a winner of the 2019 #ShotoniPhone challenge.

Phil Schiller
Phil has helped Apple reinvent mobile phones with iPhone. A keen photographer, Phil helps with efforts in developing breakthrough camera technology as senior vice president of Worldwide Marketing.

Kaiann Drance
Kaiann works with talented teams at Apple to deliver products that put great photographic tools in the hands of many, including the first iPod touch with a camera and multiple generations of iPhone, in her role as vice president of Worldwide Product Marketing.

Brooks Kraft
Brooks is a professional photographer and worked in editorial and commercial photography prior to joining Apple. He was a contributing photographer at TIME magazine, where he covered the White House during the Bush and Obama administrations, as well as seven presidential campaigns.

Jon McCormack
Jon is an accomplished photographer who is currently vice president of Camera and Photos. Jon’s images have been published by international organizations including TIME, The New York Times, UNESCO, The Nature Conservancy, Africa Geographic and others.

Arem Duplessis
Arem works closely with some of the most accomplished photographers in the world in his role as the director of photography in Apple’s marketing team. He previously served as design director of The New York Times Magazine for nearly a decade.

Submitting Your Night Mode Shots

Share your top Night mode photos taken on iPhone 11, iPhone 11 Pro and iPhone 11 Pro Max on Instagram and Twitter using the hashtags #ShotoniPhone and #NightmodeChallenge to participate in the challenge. Weibo users can participate using #ShotoniPhone# and #NightmodeChallenge#. Please note which model you used to capture your image in the caption. You can also choose to submit your images in their highest resolution via email to shotoniphone@apple.com, using the file format ‘firstname_lastname_nightmode_iPhonemodel.’ Photos can be straight from the camera, edited through Apple’s editing tools in the Photos app or with third-party software. Submissions will be accepted beginning at 12:01 a.m. PST on January 8 and ending at 11:59 p.m. PST on January 29. You must be 18 years of age or older to participate, and this challenge is not open to Apple employees or their immediate families.

The five winning photos will be featured on Apple Newsroom, apple.com, Apple Instagram (@apple), Apple WeChat, Apple Twitter accounts and Apple Weibo accounts, and may appear at Apple Stores, on billboards, or a third-party public photo exhibition. Winners will be notified on March 4, 2020.Should you choose to submit your photos via social media, the images must be made public. Ineligible submissions include photos that violate or infringe upon another person’s rights, including but not limited to copyright, trademark, privacy, publicity or any other intellectual property rights or civil rights; contain sexually explicit, nude, obscene, violent or other objectionable or inappropriate content; or in any way disparage Apple or any other person or party.Apple believes strongly that artists should be compensated for their work and will pay a licensing fee to the five winning photographers for use of such photos on Apple marketing channels. You retain your rights to your photograph; however, by submitting your photo, you grant Apple a royalty-free, worldwide, irrevocable, non-exclusive license for one year to use, modify, publish, display, distribute, create derivative works from and reproduce the photo on Apple Newsroom, apple.com, Apple Twitter accounts, Apple Instagram (@apple), at Apple Stores, on billboards, Apple Weibo, Apple WeChat, in a third-party public photo exhibition, and any Apple internal exhibitions. Any photograph reproduced will include a photographer credit. If your photo is selected to be featured in marketing materials, you further agree to grant Apple exclusive commercial use of the photo for the life of the license.Official rules apply; see attached rules for more details.