Breathtaking landscapes take top prizes at the global Pano Awards
2025 Pano Awards
The winners of the 16th Epson International Pano Awards have been announced, featuring images that showcase vast landscapes and architectural marvels. The 2025 competition drew more than 4,500 entries by hundreds of professional and amateur photographers around the world. Participants could enter into the professional or amateur categories, with subcategories for Nature/Landscape and Built Environment/Architecture.
Beyond prizes for each category, the contest also features special awards. These include the Southeast Asia Open Photographer of the Year, chosen by the executive team at Epson Southeast Asia. Similarly, the Epson Digital Art Prize is decided by the executive team at Epson Australia, and to be considered, entries must show excellence in digital post-processing and photographic technique.
The Raw Planet Award is for the highest scoring stitched image in the Open competition. The image must use limited software processing except stitching for this award. The Curator's Award is selected by curator David Evans for his favorite image in the competition.
Images submitted to the contest use a 2:1 aspect ratio to fit the accepted definition of panorama. Entries can be stitched or cropped from multiple or single exposures, and images may be taken at any focal length. Post-production is allowed, but the contest specifies that excessive manipulation may result in a lower score if it isn't well executed. AI-generated images and elements are not allowed.
You can see the top 100 winners of each category at the Pano Awards website.
Image by Alex Wides.
Open Photographer of the Year
Photographer: Alex Wides
Country: Italy
Award(s): Open Photographer of the Year, First Place Nature/Landscape Category
Image title: Last Fireworks
Image location: Algeria
Caption: 360° panorama captured in the Algerian Desert
The 10-day nomad trip to Algeria turned out to be one of the best adventures ever.
After many nights crossing dunes and climbing rocky ridges, I reached a remote viewpoint on the last evening of this amazing expedition.
As the sun went down, the sky literally exploded... layer after layer of clouds lit up, painting the desert with fire and gold.
Using my Sony A7 IV with a fisheye lens on a tripod, I captured a full multi-exposure sequence at f/8 and ISO 100, rotating carefully around the nodal point to create a seamless 360° panorama.
That sunset felt like a farewell, the last blaze of light closing with "fireworks" one of the most meaningful journeys I’ve ever taken.
alexwides.com
Instagram: @alexwides_panoramas
Facebook: facebook.com/alexwidespanoramics/
Winner Open Built Environment / Architecture
Photographer: Vitaly Golovatyuk
Country: China
Award(s): Open Runner-Up, First Place Built Environment Category, Highest Scoring Aerial Image and Highest Scoring Vertical Image
Image title: Not A Tiny HK Island
Image location: Hong Kong Island
Caption: This aerial photograph was captured from Victoria Peak, Hong Kong, at sunset. As a technical experiment, I manually shot a 48-image panorama using a DJI Phantom 3 Pro.
The final artwork is the result of meticulously stitching and inverting the composite, transforming the city and sky into a mesmerizing, abstract landscape.
Upon its initial release, the image captivated a global audience, overwhelming my Instagram with an unexpected and passionate response.
panvelvet.com
IG @panvelvet
Southeast Asia Open Photographer of the Year
Photographer: William Chua
Country: Singapore
Award(s): Southeast Asia Open Photographer of the Year
Image title: Wildebeest Migration in Kenya
Image location: Kenya
Caption: I’ve been to many places across Africa, but Kenya still remains one of my favourites. Although I’ve witnessed the wildebeest migration countless times, it never ceases to amaze me. Last year, I found myself back in Kenya once again. Photographing the migration is never easy — it demands lots of patience and of cos a touch of luck.
After several hours of waiting, we finally saw the wildebeests moving. It’s always a breathtaking moment to witness the crossing. As a photographer, you have to pace yourself, stay calm amid the chaos, and think carefully about how to frame the story unfolds before you. For this image, what caught my attention was a lone wildebeest turning back amidst the frenzy. In that instant, I knew that was the shot I wanted.
Instagram @wildlife_photo_by_william_chua and @william_chua_photography
facebook.com/williamchuaphotography
tiktok.com/@williamchuaphotography
Amateur Photographer of the Year
Photographer: Kevin Nyun
Country: United States
Award(s): Amateur Photographer of the Year, First Place Nature/Landscape Category
Image title: The Altiplano Landscape
Image location: Altiplano, Bolivia
Caption: This image was from my last morning in the Bolivia highland. We have been unlucky with the weather for three straight days and the clouds finally cleared at that moment. Bolivia highland, to my knowledge, is less explored due to the difficulty of reaching remote locations and the high altitude of almost 5000 meters. On top of that, snow was quite early this year, and I was in awe seeing the red dessert mixed with fresh white powder. I will never know when I will get to have a moment like this in the future, so I quickly launched my drone and used the pano tool to compose this image. The total number of images in this composition is 21 images single exposure stitched in Lightroom and processed through Lightroom and Photoshop.
Winner Amateur Built Environment / Architecture
Photographer: Pedro Nogales
Country: Spain
Award(s): Amateur Runner-Up, First Place Built Environment Category
Image title: Through the palette
Image location: Madrid (Spain)
Caption: This photograph depicts one of the four towers that shape the financial district of the Spanish capital. More specifically, it's the PwC Tower, which is the third highest skyscraper in Spain (236 m or 775 ft). Its surroundings merge with garden areas, which connect the spaces between these concrete giants.
The skyscraper peaks through an opening that inevitably brings a painter's palette to our minds, while inviting us to imagine a world created before being depicted. Within this frame, the tower ascends into the sky, manifesting the modernity and avant-garde design of this architectonic complex.
Certainly, it's the perfect place for a minimalist architecture photograph.
VR / 360 Award
*The full immersive image is viewable at the Pano Awards website.
Photographer: Cristoph Simon
Country: Germany
Award: VR/360 winner
Image title: Hverarönd Aurora
Image location: Hverarönd geothermal area, Iceland
Caption: This panorama was taken on a freezing March night in the high-temperature region of Hverarönd in northern Iceland. It was an awe-inspiring experience to stand alone in this surreal lunar landscape, surrounded by the hissing and sulphurous scent of the solfataras and fumaroles, as the delicate green of a single aurora arc transformed into a powerful substorm within minutes, and the Northern Lights danced above and around me in intense colors.
To achieve the highest possible image quality despite the wide aperture, I photographed a relatively tight pattern with large overlaps (2x6+N+Z) with a 15mm fisheye lens. It was important to be quick to minimize stitching errors between the individual images. On the one hand, the aurora borealis was noticeably moving, and on the other, the vapor columns of the solfataras were constantly rotating due to the constantly changing wind direction. Despite the somewhat challenging conditions, I was able to capture several 360° images during this overwhelming light show. An experience of a lifetime!
www.360-grad-sachsen.de
Blog www.360-grad-sachsen.de/panorama-blog
Facebook www.facebook.com/360GradSachsen and www.facebook.com/christoph.simon.10
Epson Digital Art Prize
Photographer: Daniel Viñé Garcia
Country: Spain
Award(s): Epson Digital Art Prize, third place Open Built Environment Category
Image title: Tides of Tradition
Image location: Hoi An, Vietnam
Caption: In this coastal village of Vietnam, survival is woven in silence. These women, working in morning shade and salt-laden air, are the unseen guardians of sustenance. The nets they mend are not mere tools, but lifelines binding sea and community together.
Their anonymity turns them from individuals into archetypes — the enduring backbone of a tradition that predates memory. What the ocean tears apart, they restore, ensuring that each tide can return with promise. They do not face the waves, yet the sea depends on their hands.
danielvgphoto.com
Instagram @danielvgphoto
Curators Award
Photographer: Chris Byrne
Country: United States
Award(s): Curators Award
Image title: Elysium
Image location: Mount Rainier, Washington
Caption: During the late summer months of August the high alpine areas of Mount Rainier in Washington come alive with wildflowers. Starting at the lower elevations and then working into bloom at higher elevations as the days go on. This particular year I had quite a bit of time to explore this park and made three or four hikes on separate occasions up to this location with my main purpose to photograph a tarn that had a perfect reflection of this glorious mountain. And each time that I did that hike, this field of lupine just kept getting better and better. On my final trek up there for the season with a very good friend of mine, we were all alone breathing in the fresh mountain air and listening to the birds watching this scene of a perfect meadow and mountain unfold before our eyes. As some storm clouds started blowing out to the east I knew that there would be a gap on the horizon and purposefully waited until the very last rays of the sun gave the field of flowers that beautiful side and back light for the depth that I wanted in the image. Just a minute after pressing the shutter the light and drama was gone.
chrisbyrnephotography.com
instagram @chrisbyrnephotography
www.facebook.com/ChrisByrnePhoto
Raw Planet Award
Photographer: Daniel Viñé Garcia
Country: Spain
Award(s): RAW Planet Award
Image title: Cathedral of Shadows
Image location: Hanksville, Utah
Caption: The day I captured this image, the desert felt endless. During our journey through the American Southwest, one place had always fascinated me—Factory Butte, an isolated monolith surrounded by a labyrinth of badlands. I launched my drone into the still evening air, exploring the textures and lines carved by centuries of erosion. Then, just as the sun dipped low, the summit cast its immense shadow across the land. I realized I was witnessing a fleeting alignment of light and form, so I captured a full 360° panorama—revealing the sun blazing on one side, the vast shadow stretching on the other, and the raw, timeless silence of Utah in between.
danielvgphoto.com
Instagram @danielvgphoto
Second Place Open Nature / Landscape
Photographer: Marina Cano
Country: Spain
Image title: Sacred Nature
Image location: Lake Nakuru, Kenya
Second Place Open Built Environment
Photographer: Peter Li
Country: Great Britain
Image title: Ambisnaena
Image location: Musei Vaticani, Vatican City
Second Place Amateur Nature / Landscape
Photographer: Luis Cajete
Country: Spain
Image title: The Wave
Image location: Arizona (USA)
Second Place Amateur Open Built Environment
Photographer: Agnes Anna Sadowski
Country: Germany
Image title: Great Wall
Image location: China
Third Place Open Nature / Landscape
Photographer: Alex Wides
Country: Italy
Image title: Jackpot
Image location: Rago National Park, Norway
Caption: 360° panorama captured in Northern Norway
I first discovered this location about four years ago through a photo that completely captivated me... a suspended lake spilling into a valley, where an epic river carved a perfect serpent of water through the landscape. I told myself: one day, I have to photograph this place.
In 2022 I passed not far from it, but my work took the Lofoten Islands and I missed the chance, for two more years the dream remained on hold.
In the summer of 2024 I was finally close again, but the weather was brutal... ten straight days with no clear window to hike up.
After finishing my tours on Senja Island, I decided to try once more. The first attempt gave me only fog, grey skies, and disappointment. Still, I couldn’t give up. The next evening, I hiked back up with fresh supplies, hoping for a good weather window.
When I opened the tent… "Jackpot".
The sky exploded in a spectacular half hour of Northern Lights. I captured the full 360° panorama using a Sony A7 IV with a fisheye lens at f/3.5, for 4 seconds, ISO 16000... This was a perfect reward after years of waiting. In that moment, everything came together: the place, the light, my satisfaction.
This is Norway... tough, unpredictable, but when it gives, it gives in style.
Third Place Amateur Nature / Landscape
Photographer: Julio Castro Pardo
Country: Spain
Image title: Alien Throne
Image location: Valley of Dreams, New Mexico (USA)
Third Place Amateur Open Built Environment
Photographer: Florian Kriechbaumer
Country: UAE
Image title: Architectural Playground
Image location: Baku, Azerbaijan