Awards

 

 

 

Top 50 placing images of the People and Portrait category in the 2011 Amateur Awards

3rd Place FINALIST | Australian Geographic

also received 6th, 25th, 39th and 40th place in TOP 50.

 

2 Gold Awards- Category : People and Portrait –  Amateur Awards



“The woman and the chicken” received FINALIST 3D place in TOP 5 Category: Amateur People & Portraits.

 

 

5 Silver Awards- Category : People and Portrait  - Amateur Awards (see screenshot)

 

 

2 Bronze Awards-Category: People and Portrait in the OPEN Awards –  Amateur 

PAROJA TRIBE.Kumbhara Girl ( Pottery ) Village near Kakriguma..India, Orissa...© Ingetje Tadros.www.ingetjetadros.com.. (Ingetje Tadros/Photo by Ingetje Tadros)
Raphael: Day 01 : Momenta Workshops....Photo by Ingetje Tadros.. (Ingetje Tadros/Photo by Ingetje Tadros)

19 Bronze Awards Category: People and Portrait – Amateur Awards (see above screenshot)

 

 

 

3d Place-Honor of Distinction in Photojournalism at  MastersCup – AMATEUR- 5th Annual -The International Award Honoring Color  Photography – October 2011

Raphael: Day 02: Momenta Workshops....Photo by Ingetje Tadros.. (Ingetje Tadros/Photo by Ingetje Tadros)

11,321 entries were received from 83 countries and your work received a high percentage of votes overall. The Awards Jury represents the industry’s biggest names and tastemakers who reviewed the entries online before making the nominations shortlist and honoring 272 title awards in 18 categories. The Awards could not have wished for a better group of professionals to work with.

 

2 Nominee’s received at the 5th Annual MastersCup -Amateur- The International Award Honoring Color  Photography -Category: Portrait. Oct.2011.
Goroka Festival (Ingetje Tados) Raphael: Day 02: Momenta Workshops....Photo by Ingetje Tadros.. (Ingetje Tadros/Photo by Ingetje Tadros) 

Nominee at the 6th Annual Black & White Spider Awards  20-8-2011

Nominee status is only awarded to images that receive votes from the Jury. Many thousands of images entered do not receive any award. 

 (ingetje tadros)

 

International LOUPE Awards 2011.

Top 50 placing images of the People and Portrait Category in the 2010 Amateur Awards  
made it in the Top 50 at nr. 49

 

PX3 Pris de la photographie Paris 2011:

PX3 2011 COMPETITION

Award: Silver

Presented by le Prix de la Photographie Paris (Px3) to:
INGETJE TADROS

Title of Submission:
Tribal Mursi girl

Category:
Press – Non-Professional

PX3 2011 COMPETITION

Award: Bronze

Presented by le Prix de la Photographie Paris (Px3) to:
INGETJE TADROS

Title of Submission:
Like a young Mursi warrior

Category:
Portraiture – Non-Professional

 

Award: Bronze

 

Award; Bronze

Award: Bronze

Award: Bronze
The kids wear the calabash maybe for different reasons, for the heat, for decorations or because their parents wear them too. The calabash or bottle gourd (not to be confused with the calabaza) is a vine grown for its fruit, which can either be harvested young and used as a vegetable or harvested mature, dried, and used as a bottle, utensil, or pipe. For this reason, one of the calabash subspecies is known as the bottle gourd. The fresh fruit has a light green smooth skin and a white flesh. However the rounder varieties are called Calabash gourds whereas the longer and slimmer kinds are usually well known as bottle gourds. The calabash was one of the first cultivated plants in the world, grown not for food but as a container.[1] It was named for the calabash tree (Crescentia cujete). This is a very exotic and a small tribe living in the Weyto Valley Desert living in a very harsh physical enviroment. The Arbore women generally wear a large black cloth to cover their heads. They perform many ritual-like dances while singing. They believe that dancing and singing with eliminate negative energies and give positive energy that will bring good-luck. The Arbore measure their wealth by the number of cattle they own.. (Ingetje Tadros)

Award:Bronze

Presented by le Prix de la Photographie Paris (Px3) to:
INGETJE TADROS

Title of Submission:
Bumi tribe

Category:
Book Proposal (Series Only) – Non-Professional

 

Award: Bronze

Presented by le Prix de la Photographie Paris (Px3) to:
INGETJE TADROS

Title of Submission:
Arbore beauty

Category:
Portraiture – Non-Professional

www.Px3.fr

Received an Honourable Mention:

Received an Honourable mention
Young Arbore girl, in traditional outfit. These young girls are so beautiful. They wear many necklaces in bright colours and lovely earrings.This is a very exotic and a small tribe living in the Weyto Valley Desert living in a very harsh physical enviroment. The Arbore women generally wear a large black cloth to cover their heads. They perform many ritual-like dances while singing. They believe that dancing and singing with eliminate negative energies and give positive energy that will bring good-luck. The Arbore measure their wealth by the number of cattle they own.. This is a very exotic and a small tribe living in the Weyto Valley Desert living in a very harsh physical enviroment. The Arbore women generally wear a large black cloth to cover their heads. They perform many ritual-like dances while singing. They believe that dancing and singing with eliminate negative energies and give positive energy that will bring good-luck. The Arbore measure their wealth by the number of cattle they own.. (Ingetje Tadros)

Received an Honourble Mention
This is a very exotic and a small tribe living in the Weyto Valley Desert living in a very harsh physical enviroment. The Arbore women generally wear a large black cloth to cover their heads. They perform many ritual-like dances while singing. They believe that dancing and singing with eliminate negative energies and give positive energy that will bring good-luck. The Arbore measure their wealth by the number of cattle they own.. (Ingetje Tadros)

Received an Honourable Mention
The kids wear the calabash maybe for different reasons, for the heat, for decorations or because their parents wear them too. The calabash or bottle gourd (not to be confused with the calabaza) is a vine grown for its fruit, which can either be harvested young and used as a vegetable or harvested mature, dried, and used as a bottle, utensil, or pipe. For this reason, one of the calabash subspecies is known as the bottle gourd. The fresh fruit has a light green smooth skin and a white flesh. However the rounder varieties are called Calabash gourds whereas the longer and slimmer kinds are usually well known as bottle gourds. The calabash was one of the first cultivated plants in the world, grown not for food but as a container.[1] It was named for the calabash tree (Crescentia cujete). This is a very exotic and a small tribe living in the Weyto Valley Desert living in a very harsh physical enviroment. The Arbore women generally wear a large black cloth to cover their heads. They perform many ritual-like dances while singing. They believe that dancing and singing with eliminate negative energies and give positive energy that will bring good-luck. The Arbore measure their wealth by the number of cattle they own.. (Ingetje Tadros)

Received an Honourable Mention
The kids wear the calabash maybe for different reasons, for the heat, for decorations or because their parents wear them too. The calabash or bottle gourd (not to be confused with the calabaza) is a vine grown for its fruit, which can either be harvested young and used as a vegetable or harvested mature, dried, and used as a bottle, utensil, or pipe. For this reason, one of the calabash subspecies is known as the bottle gourd. The fresh fruit has a light green smooth skin and a white flesh. However the rounder varieties are called Calabash gourds whereas the longer and slimmer kinds are usually well known as bottle gourds. The calabash was one of the first cultivated plants in the world, grown not for food but as a container.[1] It was named for the calabash tree (Crescentia cujete). This is a very exotic and a small tribe living in the Weyto Valley Desert living in a very harsh physical enviroment. The Arbore women generally wear a large black cloth to cover their heads. They perform many ritual-like dances while singing. They believe that dancing and singing with eliminate negative energies and give positive energy that will bring good-luck. The Arbore measure their wealth by the number of cattle they own.. (Ingetje Tadros)

Received an Honourable Mention

Received an Honourable Mention
The Mursi live between their dry & wet season on the Tama plains, north of  Mago Park in the Omo River region of southwestern Ethiopia. (Ingetje Tadros)

Received an Honourable Mention

Received an Honourable Mention
The Mursi live between their dry & wet season on the Tama plains, north of  Mago Park in the Omo River region of southwestern Ethiopia. (Ingetje Tadros)

Received an Honourable Mention
 (Ingetje Tadros)

 

In the past:

The 2008 International Aperture Awards
Top 50 placing images of the Photojournalism Category in the 2008 Awards

24th and 35th place

The 2009 International Aperture Awards

Top 50 placing images of the People and Portrait Category in the 2009 Amateur Awards

7 Bronze Awards

6 Silver Awards

1 Gold Award

PX3 2009 – Prix de la Photographie de Paris

1st in category ‘Self Promotion’
3rd in category ‘People’
1st in category ‘General News’
1st in category ‘Other’
2nd in category ‘Personality’

 

The 2010 International Aperture Awards

17 Bronze Awards