Chase Jarvis Chase Jarvis
  • Photos
  • Projects
  • About
  • Blog
  • Book
Chase Jarvis Chase Jarvis
  • Photos
  • Projects
  • About
  • Blog
  • Book

chase jarvis TECH: Complete Guide to Aerial Photography & Video

Although I’ve mixed a whole lotta R/C helicopters into shoots, there are many more times in my profession when climbing into a real A-star is essential to get the shot. A recent assignment in the Caribbean presented another on of those lovely occasions…and while I’ve touched on shooting film + photos from a helicopter in some past posts, I’ve never gone deep on the how-to of shooting from a heli.
chasejarvis_aerial_photography_howto
And before you dismiss this and say “This is so outrageous, when will I ever get to shoot from a helicopter” …I’ll just say that every photographer who has ever shot from a chopper has said those same words, only to find themselves ripping heavy G turns and shooting from blue skies at some point in their career. So stick with me. And one other note – yes flying around can be expensive, but it can also be done relatively affordably depending on how long you fly, what chopper, and of course…who’s paying 😉

Here’s a few teasers of some of the stuff I cover in this video:

// Helicopter safety. It is critical that you understand how to navigate your way safely in and around this machine. There are two hard and fast rules that all helicopter people live by when it comes to helicopters: 1) Never walk around the tail-end of the helicopter while its on the ground and 2) the pilot is always in charge. Always.

// Personal safety. Strap in! There are a couple of ways to get this done and the video runs thru several of them… If you walk away with one piece of advice, it’s if you’re hanging out of the helicopter – always be connected to it by at least two (2) connection points.

// Gear + settings. In the vid I lay out exactly what gear I take up with me (it includes the D4 and D800), but for the sake of driving some points home I’ll repeat… here two of my gear guides:

1) Remove the lens hoods – this will prevent excessive movement due to rotor downdraft as well as your forward motion, and 2) keep the gear well attached to yo and always pass or move gear with both hands when the door is off. 3)I always shoot manually, mid-ISO 400 range, and a minimum of 1000 shutter speed (I really like 1600 or greater). 4)Shoot with large volume cards to avoid having to change cards while hanging out of the bird.
….and many more in the video

Good luck – hope this helps those of you who are just getting into it, have a fantasy of flying that you’ll someday realize, or hell maybe even a seasoned pro will pick up a tip here and there. And as always if you’ve got other tips to share – please do.

Music by the one and only Big Chocolate.

Related Posts

10 Things Every Creative Person (That’s YOU) Must Learn
051026_ChaseJarvis_einstein_writing_vlrgwidec
Writing Makes Photographers More Creative — 5 Easy Tips
Daniel Pink: The Power of Regret
Chris Hutchins of Chase Jarvis LIVE
Chris Hutchins: All the Hacks to Maximize Your Life
Chris Burkard on Chase Jarvis LIVE
The Wayward Path of Photographer Chris Burkard
Make Your Message Heard with Victoria Wellman

38 replies on:
chase jarvis TECH: Complete Guide to Aerial Photography & Video

Comments navigation

Previous
Next
  1. document self-scanning says:
    September 25, 2014 at 1:21 am

    This really answered my downside, thanks!

  2. interfaces de video profesional says:
    September 1, 2014 at 9:45 pm

    You also can rest assured you will be sent professional and guaranteed service as well as a the most cash for your good
    old MacBook. I likewise did the encryption thing a prevented someone per
    se from gaining access to my mac.

  3. Jorrit Lousberg says:
    August 28, 2014 at 3:15 am

    Nice video! One totally non-photography related remark: The way you have your harness closed in the front (with the metal buckle connected to the metal ring) is not the correct way of doing it. You should connect the metal buckle to the textile loop which also holds the front metal ring. The metal ring is for connecting fall-arrest lines, not to close the harness with. Check image 5, page 4 of the Petzl manual linked below.

    http://www.petzl.com/files/all/technical-notice/Pro/C71-NAVAHO-BOD-CE-USA.pdf

    Happy and safe flying!

    Jorrit

  4. Benjamin Burrows says:
    October 11, 2013 at 4:52 am

    You can rent gyros! For video, check out the Kenyon labs ks4x4 or ks6x6.

    http://www.lensprotogo.com/search/?q=Gyro

    Benjamin

  5. JeffreyB says:
    September 19, 2013 at 7:35 pm

    When shooting video with a dslr, what would you recommend to keep it steady and vibration free? I have made stills from a heli before, but never any video..

Comments navigation

Previous
Next

Comments are closed.

BUY NEVER PLAY IT SAFE NOW!

Get weekly, curated access to the best of everything I do.

Popular Posts

topaz gigapixel 2Topaz vs Magnific: Which Is A Better AI Image Upscaler?
higgsfield nano bananaNano Banana with No Watermark? Here’s how to remove it.
style xfer thumbHow to Clone Any Image Style With Nano Banana Pro & Weavy (style transfer)
anglesHow To Create New Angles From Any Photo: Nano Banana Pro vs. Qwen Image Edit
vibe motion thumbHiggsfield Vibe Motion Is Here: My Honest Review for Creative Pros
grok apeHow to Create Video from an Image with Grok AI Video
midjourney base imageDoes JSON Prompting Actually Work? Tested with Nano Banana
higgsfield ai logoHiggsfield AI for Creative Professionals: A Deep Dive
vans shot 1Create A Virtual Product Shoot In Weavy & Nano Banana (fashion editorial)
Asset 6weavy comfyWeavy vs ComfyUI: Which Is Better for Creative Pros?

© 2024 Chase Jarvis. All rights reserved.