Sitting just like a boss
Miss Lum Xin Yi was visiting her grandparents' home two Sundays ago when she saw her 90-year-old grandfather sitting at his favourite spot.
Noticing how the sunlight was falling on him, Miss Lum, 19, snapped this photo of him.
"It was coincidental and I liked how my grandpa looked pretty cool," said the first-year student at Nanyang Technological University's School of Art, Design and Media.
"I think the photo shows him in his glory. He likes to sit there like a boss."
She submitted the photo after reading about last week's Big Picture contest theme, Silver Singapore, which calls for photos of how the city's landscape, communities and people were ageing.
And it clinched the weekly $500 prize for the year-long competition organised by The New Paper and the Ministry of Culture, Community and Youth to encourage Singaporeans to document everyday life in the city.
While all three judges last week picked different winners, Miss Lum's photo was the highest ranked among their top three picks.
WINNER
The photo was a winner for judge Timothy Sim because it captured an atmosphere that successfully conveyed her story.
"Good choice of framing, light falls just right, and the colours isolate the man from his dull surroundings very well," he said.
Also impressed by the photo was judge Alphonsus Chern, who picked it as his runner-up and praised how it depicted the typical home for Singapore's silver generation.
For his winner, Mr Chern picked Mr Hang Loo Ming's picture of an elderly man helping a senior cross the road in the rain.
"This photograph of one senior helping another cross the rain-slicked road depicts, in a single moment, a quintessential heartland scene in Singapore," he said.
Last week's third judge Nguan had a different winner as well.
He selected Mr Christian Lam's black-and-white photo of an elderly couple on a bus as it was an unconventional response to the contest theme.
"The photograph is intriguing with the poses of the couple replicating the effect of a mirror image, and the pole grip between them even resembling a mirror's frame," he said.
To see the photos by Mr Hang, Mr Lam and last week's other finalists, visit The Big Picture's website at www2.tnp.sg/TheBigPicture.
THE JUDGES
Timothy Sim works at Reuters as a picture editor. When he is not working, he spends time on his own passion as a photographer. See his photos at www.timothysim.com
Alphonsus Chern is a photojournalist with The Straits Times. He graduated from Nanyang Technological University with a major in journalism and a minor in music. When he is not photographing landscapes or playing the pipe organ, he is reading, tinkering with bicycles, collecting rare badges or enjoying the outdoors.
Nguan examines life in big cities through his images. His solo exhibition "How Loneliness Goes" will be presented in January as part of the 2015 M1 Singapore Fringe Festival.
WHAT'S NEXT
"Future Ready SG" is our new contest theme this fortnight. Show us how Singapore and its people are gearing up for the future and stand to win $500. The deadline is midnight, this Thursday.
To find out the latest contest updates and see photos of all the finalists and winners for the Big Picture, visit our website, www2.tnp.sg/thebigpicture or like our Facebook page, facebook.com/TheBigPictureContest
Get The New Paper on your phone with the free TNP app. Download from the Apple App Store or Google Play Store now