Los Angeles Times

Up high in the sky, it’s a snap

- By Liesl Bradner

On his way to work one day, drone photograph­er Alexey Goncharov sat on a bench near Moscow’s Mercury City Tower, searching for the best angle to capture the perfect reflection off the soaring, pinkish-bronze mirrored windows.

He sent his drone up the 1,112-foot-tall building. While the drone was in the flight, he spotted three window washers dangling on the side of the building. “I liked the way their work looked from that perspectiv­e,” recounted the physicist at Moscow State University. “They seemed to wash the city itself, not just the building’s windows.”

His high-flying photograph earned him second prize in the urban category of the 2017 Dronestagr­am contest. The French photoshari­ng community is dedicated to displaying the best aerial images by profession­als and enthusiast­s.

In the past, drones have been mostly used by the military. The photograph­y aspect offers a new perspectiv­e of the world from the simple beauty of perfect rows of lavender fields being harvested by a lone tractor in Provence, France, to the hard-to-reach ancient rock fortress Sigiriya in Sri Lanka.

There’s a photo of a winding Transylvan­ian road leading to Count Dracula’s castle and a sandy beach magically turned into a giant sheet of drawing paper with a picture of a shark nipping at the heels of the photograph­er’s son. This piece of imaginatio­n won an award for Frenchman Romain Gaillard in the creativity category. Another prize in that category went to Cape Town, South Africa, photograph­er Luke Bell for his shot reflecting the long shadows of two cows drinking from a dam on a farm near Stellenbos­ch.

“I launched my drone to capture the scene in a way that was impossible with any other type of cameras,” noted Bell.

More than 8,000 photograph­s from around the world were entered in the fourth annual contest. A panel of experts from National Geographic and Dronestagr­am judged the highflying entries, which will be published in National Geographic Magazine. A book of drone photograph­s, “Dronescape­s: The New Aerial Photograph­y From Dronestagr­am,” was published in May.

 ?? Luke Bell Dronestagr­am ?? “TWO MOO” by Luke Bell of Cape Town, South Africa, took second place on the creativity category in Dronestagr­am’s 2017 contest.
Luke Bell Dronestagr­am “TWO MOO” by Luke Bell of Cape Town, South Africa, took second place on the creativity category in Dronestagr­am’s 2017 contest.
 ?? helios1412 Dronestagr­am ?? OTHER WINNERS in contest include, from top, “Dawn on Mercury Tower” by Alexey Goncharov, “End of the Line” by Martin Sanchez and “Waterlily” by helios 1412.
helios1412 Dronestagr­am OTHER WINNERS in contest include, from top, “Dawn on Mercury Tower” by Alexey Goncharov, “End of the Line” by Martin Sanchez and “Waterlily” by helios 1412.
 ?? Alexey Goncharov Dronestrag­ram ??
Alexey Goncharov Dronestrag­ram
 ?? Martin Sanchez Dronestagr­am ??
Martin Sanchez Dronestagr­am

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