OT Staff
Nihar Sudhir Shah’s architectural frame celebrates geometry, symmetry and scale, using a smartphone to translate built heritage into crisp lines, balanced light, and patient observation of space with modern restraint.
Soumayan Biswas captures motion through decisive timing, freezing energy mid-flow, where blur and clarity coexist, proving smartphones can render speed, rhythm, and emotion without excess with confident visual intent always.
Satya Manidhar Vegi presents nature and landscape with calm precision, layering light, terrain and weather to reveal quiet drama, scale and ecological sensitivity through a thoughtful smartphone perspective rooted deeply.
Suvro Dip Saha explores night and light by balancing shadow, colour and contrast, extracting mood from darkness, and demonstrating how smartphones interpret low-light scenes with control and atmosphere elegantly composed.
Pradiptamoy Paul’s portrait centres human presence, using proximity, expression and natural light to create intimacy, dignity and narrative, proving smartphone portraits can feel personal, honest and enduring through careful framing.
Shiju M S documents the street with alert empathy, catching fleeting gestures, humour and tension, and turning everyday moments into visual stories shaped by timing, patience and urban curiosity alone.
Mohsin Majid Mir’s People’s Choice win reflects broad resonance, combining accessible storytelling, emotional clarity and strong composition, connecting audiences through a smartphone image that feels immediate and sincere universally admired.