This is how you light up a climbers on a cliff with speedlights attached to drones

John Aldred

John Aldred is a photographer with over 25 years of experience in the portrait and commercial worlds. He is based in Scotland and has been an early adopter – and occasional beta tester – of almost every digital imaging technology in that time. As well as his creative visual work, John uses 3D printing, electronics and programming to create his own photography and filmmaking tools and consults for a number of brands across the industry.

drone_mounted_speedlights

So what do you do when you need to position lights off to the side of a cliff and you left your 300ft tall light stands at home?  You mount them to a drone, of course, which is exactly what National Geographic photographer Keith Ladzinski did recently while taking the new Nikon D500 and SB-5000 flash units out for a test drive in Verdon Gorge in the south of France.

This is something I’ve always wanted to try myself.  I almost never find myself hanging off the sides of cliffs or mountains, but I shoot a lot in the middle of nowhere, and light stands are sometimes woefully inadequate for letting me get the light exactly where I want it.

A drone would be super handy for this purpose, but Nikon’s previous optical wireless CLS system would possibly face some issues.  Now that they’ve switched over to a radio wireless system with the new SB-5000, line of sight issues are a thing of the past.

With the assistance of Larkin Carey at Falkor Aerials, Keith shot video from the drone-mounted Nikon D500 to fully test its limits, and the 4K capturing abilities.

drone_d500

But soon the attention switched over from movies to stills, with Keith photographing the climbers as they scaled the cliff faces with ease.

keith_ladzinski_shooting

Shooting while dangling from a cliff probably isn’t the most comfortable of situations to begin with, but with the added complexity of flash and not necessarily even being able to turn around to see exactly where they’re positioned or which way they’re pointed, radio communication helped to keep Keith and Larkin in touch with each other throughout the process.

drone_sb5000

But it did produce some amazing results.

keith_ladzinski_sb5000

I hope that, as drone technology evolves, and regulations become more consistent, this will open this up as an option to more of us.  I could see this developing into a very cool system in the future if it took off, so to speak.  Here’s the full behind the scenes video.

You can see Keith’s complete set of Nikon D500 images over in the portfolio on his website.

Aside from the extremely cool factor of mounting speedlights to a drone, that 4K footage is making me want a D500 even more!

[via ISO1200]


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John Aldred

John Aldred

John Aldred is a photographer with over 25 years of experience in the portrait and commercial worlds. He is based in Scotland and has been an early adopter – and occasional beta tester – of almost every digital imaging technology in that time. As well as his creative visual work, John uses 3D printing, electronics and programming to create his own photography and filmmaking tools and consults for a number of brands across the industry.

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17 responses to “This is how you light up a climbers on a cliff with speedlights attached to drones”

  1. Rick Avatar
    Rick

    Just what every climber wants when they are 300′ up a wall… black spots burned into their vision.

    1. Gvido Mūrnieks Avatar

      Hakuna your tatas!
      It didn’t look, like the photographer shot random climbers without their knowledge and flashing them out of the blue. :D

  2. Christian Schipflinger Avatar

    Nicholas Roemmelt vll interessant für dich ;-)

  3. Gvido Mūrnieks Avatar

    Very cool!
    This is one of better uses of drone lighting, I’ve seen.

    1. Bryan Petty Avatar

      I have that Phantom, but I’m also building a custom quadcopter for stuff like this!! That’s awesome! I like the long exposure light painting drone a little more.

    2. Shannon Alexander Avatar

      you can attach some LEDs pretty easily I assume.

    3. Bryan Petty Avatar

      Oh yeah. You could attach anything. You could attach a Gopro 360° setup on the bottom :O

    4. Shannon Alexander Avatar

      I might just have to pick me up a cheap little drone for light painting.

    5. Bryan Petty Avatar

      There’s an app for the Phantom for 360° panoramas. I haven’t tested it yet.

    6. Bryan Petty Avatar

      I have one for you for $120. Brand new.

  4. Mike Musto Avatar

    That is freakin’ brilliant.

  5. Stefan Diesner Avatar

    Ziegler Claudia hast des schon mal ausprobiert ;-)

  6. Glenn Dulay Avatar

    Xylph Bryan Heruela

    1. Xylph Bryan Heruela Avatar

      Grbe n mga utak ng tao.. Hehe

  7. Frank Nazario Avatar
    Frank Nazario

    D500 + Battery Grip + New Sigma Crop Sensor Art Series Lenses… hummm explain to me again why would I need a Full Frame other than to impress who contracts me please?