Drone ile Himalaya'ların bambaşka yüzünü görüntüleyen Polonya'lı fotoğrafçı...
Thanks to the help of a drone, Polish photographer David Kaszlikowski
captured a stunning scene atop a glacier near the K2 mountain, one that
he wouldn’t have ever discovered otherwise. The quest to find a unique
Himalayan locale started while he was shooting the upcoming documentary
called K2 Touching the Sky.
Kaszlikowski wanted a personal project to work on during his downtime,
and so he sent his DJI Phantom drone to check out the scenery
surrounding the world’s second-highest peak.
The device found a secluded spot near Concordia, which is the area
below K2 where the Baltoro and Godwin-Austen glaciers converge.
Kaszlikowski noticed that there was a section of glacier surrounded by a
65-foot-wide pool of water. “The place was special, making a very clean
graphic frame,” he told Wired.
“It was disappearing, melting, changing its form every day. It was
quite obvious nobody will photograph it again like me; nobody will see
it the same way the next season.”
To capture the awe-inspiring sight, Kaszlikowski and a guide hiked to
the spot at night, where he used a 30-second exposure shot with a Canon
5D Mark III. While the shutter was open, he illuminated the environment
with an LED. The result is a surreal, eerily-glowing form that looks as
though it’s from another planet.
The unexpected location is one that Kaszlikowski would’ve missed on
his own. And as a veteran in the industry, he’s seen how improving
technology, like drones, can help photographers get the best shot
possible. “But one thing never changes,” he says. “You have to follow
your vision.”
David Kaszlikowski: Website
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