Earlier this year we brought you news of a new
competition, backed by National Geographic, looking for the most
impressive drone photography.
It was arranged in conjunction with Dronestagram - a website for drone photographers to share and discuss their favourite work.The winner was of a beautiful eagle, soaring majestically above a national park in Indonesia.
As 2014 draws to a close, we invited the Dronestagram team to bring us up to date with the very best pictures taken over the past 12 months.
This is their selection.



"Stunning images taken from low altitude, near field - it is so different from images taken by satellite or plane or helicopter, or, on the other end, street view images.
"It is a new photographic language and a new way of discovering things and landscapes that we know, or that we thought we knew.
"No other device is able to take such pictures."


"I like very much the photo with the kids playing soccer in Athens.
"It's a dronie - selfie by drone - and a new way to look at people just a few metres above."



As the devices have become cheaper and more popular - so too have the worries about having lots of tiny machines flying around. Privacy and safety concerns are coming to a head - and many regulators around the world will start setting out stricter rules.
It could change the community, Mr Dupin says.
"I think pictures like these will continue to be taken, but maybe only by professionals and not by drone hobbyists anymore."



For now, amateur drone enthusiasts are relatively free to experiment with drones - and this selection shows off just some of their work.

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