A look for a premiere. Infanta Sofía has measured her choice to make her solo debut. At the gates of Christmas, with that red so typical of this Easter, I thought that this would be a very of the moment tone. But Sofía, always surprising in her looks, He has thrown himself into the white snow. A color of light that illuminates and gives splendor in winter.
The direction that the daughter of the Kings follows for her outfits has two axes: being herself and naturalness. From there and very faithful to his style, Sofía has chosen a new cut pantsuit with four black buttons in XL format. This option, that of the white tailor, is a safe bet for Leonor. The heiress chose a very similar look for her big day of the Constitutional Oath when she turned 18.
The daughter of Kings Felipe VI and Letizia has presented the awards that bear her name in the ‘Objective Heritage’ contest. Infanta Sofía Photography Contest. A contest that seeks to disseminate and disseminate images of the historical, cultural and natural legacy of the Royal Sites of Spain. This event that has brought us together today has a lot to do with Sofía, with her creative personality and her taste for the arts. It is a celebration of photography as an artistic language and its connection with technology. Also, an approach to the cultural heritage of the Royal Sites for young people. Two languages that the infanta, from a digital native generation, masters completely naturally.
Unpublished photographs, without AI
More than 250 photographs have received National Heritage from April to September. In the contest rules, participants were required to post the image on Instagram with the hashtag #ObjetivoPatrimonio. The competition jury has valued the high quality of the works presented. The images show the great skills of the photographers, their technique and their ability to capture the beauty and richness of the Royal National Heritage Sites.
Leonor’s sister has been in charge of delivering the distinctions to the winners in the three categories: Antonio Farto Casado in ‘Palaces and monasteries’, Emilie Payn in ‘Natural spaces’ and Teresa Dorado Jiménez in ‘Works of art’. Also, a diploma accrediting the top ten in each category. The prizes were the following: a nominative card valid for one year to visit the National Heritage spaces (with a companion) for the first one; a double ticket to a National Heritage Chamber Series concert with the Stradivarius at the Royal Palace of Madrid for the second; and a batch of Heritage books for the third.
The digital images were presented in both color and black and white. Original and unpublished. Within the contest rules it was specified that those that were altered were not admitted. And no photos generated by AI or photomontages or mixed techniques.
The jury, which evaluated the creativity, originality, the chosen detail and the technique, composition, perspective, volume and quality of the photography, was composed of Reyes Utrera, curator of National Heritage Photography; Santiago Sáenz Samaniego, photography historian and trustee of the FBS Foundation; Sofía Moro, photographer; Consuelo Pelegry, Director of Communication of National Heritage; Karina Marotta, technical advisor to the Presidency of National Heritage.