We've detected you are coming from a location where we have a regional site.
Please choose one of the following sites:

News

Project Hasselblad: Win a shoot with an H4D!

17/03/2010 Hasselblad, in association with Professional Photographer magazine, are on the lookout for a great photographer with a great idea.

Project Hasselblad

The Hasselblad challenge is open to all UK-based photographers of all ages. So if you are a 
photographer with a creative body of work and can come up with an imaginative response to the 
concept, you could be the winner and win the opportunity to be loaned the appropriate Hasselblad 
equipment required to create a new portfolio of work based on your winning concept.
To enter Project Hasselblad, all you need to do is submit a portfolio of six of your strongest images (they 
can be shot on any format camera) which demonstrate the quality and creativity of your work, along with 
a concept proposal. The proposal should outline a specific project you would want to use a Hasselblad 
system to photograph and complete throughout the coming year. It should give details of the proposed 
location or locations, subject matter and creative approach. You should also explain why you feel this 
project is important to you and why the Hasselblad system would be most appropriate for it.
The shortlisted entries will then be judged by Professional Photographer editor Grant Scott, Hasselblad 
managing director Chris Russell-Fish, Phillips de Pury creative director Fiona Hayes and photographer 
David Loftus.
The Prize:
The winner’s submitted images and concept proposal will feature over three pages in the June issue
of Professional Photographer. The winning images and photographer will also feature as an audio 
slideshow on the Professional Photographer website. The winner will be loaned the appropriate 
Hasselblad equipment for up to a month to create their concept, and receive the appropriate training. 
The equipment could be the latest H4D-40 or the H4D-50, along with a choice of a maximum of three 
lenses. That’s kit with a total value of approximately £22,000. The completed concept images will 
then appear in a future issue of Professional Photographer and in Hasselblad promotional material.
For details of how to enter, pick up the March issue of Professional Photographer magazine, available
now in all good newsagents, or visit the Professional Photographer website.
To see the entires so far, check out the gallery on the Professional
Photographer website.
Good luck!  

 

The Hasselblad challenge is open to all UK-based photographers of all ages. So if you are a photographer with a creative body of work and can come up with an imaginative response to the concept, you could be the winner and win the opportunity to be loaned the appropriate Hasselblad equipment required to create a new portfolio of work based on your winning concept.

To enter Project Hasselblad, all you need to do is submit a portfolio of six of your strongest images (they can be shot on any format camera) which demonstrate the quality and creativity of your work, along with a concept proposal. The proposal should outline a specific project you would want to use a Hasselblad system to photograph and complete throughout the coming year. It should give details of the proposed location or locations, subject matter and creative approach. You should also explain why you feel this project is important to you and why the Hasselblad system would be most appropriate for it.

The shortlisted entries will then be judged by Professional Photographer editor Grant Scott, Hasselblad managing director Chris Russell-Fish, Phillips de Pury creative director Fiona Hayes and photographer David Loftus.

The Prize:

The winner’s submitted images and concept proposal will feature over three pages in the June issue of Professional Photographer. The winning images and photographer will also feature as an audio slideshow on the Professional Photographer website. The winner will be loaned the appropriate Hasselblad equipment for up to a month to create their concept, and receive the appropriate training. 

The equipment could be the latest H4D-40 or the H4D-50, along with a choice of a maximum of three lenses. That’s kit with a total value of approximately £22,000. The completed concept images will then appear in a future issue of Professional Photographer and in Hasselblad promotional material.

For details of how to enter, pick up the March issue of Professional Photographer magazine, available now in all good newsagents, or visit the Professional Photographer website.

To see the entires so far, check out the gallery on the Professional Photographer website.

Good luck!