amos chapple photographer aerial views of europe taken from a drone avanzar manualmente
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Amos Chapple Photographer
Aerial views of Europe taken from a drone
Avanzar manualmente
Barcelona, Spain. The Eixample district of the city with the Sagrada Familia cathedral, centre, designed by Antoni Gaudí. The octagonal city blocks were designed to allow light and space on the street corners.
Trieste, Italy. The Vittoria Light, overlooking the Gulf of Trieste as a storm approaches at sunset. “The first job is finding somewhere out of the way to launch from, then you’re at the mercy of the weather. Dramatic skies are great, but it can’t be raining or windy. There was a lot of waiting around.”
Bourtange, Netherlands.The star fort. Three centuries after the last cannonball was fired in anger at the fort, it now serves as a museum and centre of a sleepy farming village in eastern Holland. The low, thick walls were designed to offset the pounding force of cannonfire.
Abkhazia Russian holidaymakers on the beach. “I try to avoid having it anywhere near people, but the shot in Abkhazia was taken after I saw some other guys flying a small drone above the beach - there was so much noisy commercial activity on the beach that it passed as just another gimmick.”
The Katskhi Pillar, GeorgiaA Georgian hermit has lived there for the past twenty years to be ‘closer to god.’
Yerevan, Armenia .The giant statue of Mother Armenia. “It’s always best working in the less touristy places, then showing the locals the images. One of my best friends lives in Armenia, Showing him and his friends this image was almost emotional. You could really feel the pride they had in having their city represented in a unique way.”
Paris, France Sacré-Cœur glowing in a hazy sunrise.
Budapest, Hungary Buda castle on August 20th, St Stephen’s Day, which is Hungary’s national day. The barge moored in the centre of the Danube is loaded with fireworks, launched later that night to celebrate.
Tbilisi, Georgia The Mtkvari River winds through the elegant capital city.
Magdeburg, Germany A barge chugs along the Magdeburg Water Bridge. The canal aqueduct passes over the Elbe river in the east of Germany.
Barcelona, Spain Clouds swirl through the pillars of The Temple Expiatori del Sagrat Cor Church, on the summit of Mount Tibidabo. Twenty minutes later a thunderstorm hit the city.
Istanbul, Turkey Mosques dominate the skyline as a freighter sails for the Sea of Marmara.
Budapest, Hungary The windswept Liberty Statue, overlooking the city.
Aerial views of India by drone
A knot of fishing boats at the entrance to Sassoon Dock, Mumbai.
The emperor Humayun's tomb, commissioned by his widow.
Known to the locals as 'Hill 3' this knoll jutting above Mumbai's northern slums is no more valuable than the land below.
Access to running water, which the hill lacks, is far more valuable than any view.
Kolkata's glittering memorial to Queen Victoria; in the foreground is a statue of King Edward VII, who died before the monument to his mother was completed.
ama Masjid, the heart of Islam in India. The red sandstone structure was built under the orders of the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan, who also commissioned the Taj Mahal.
Two wrestlers practising the ancient Indian sport of Kushti in a pit they had hacked into the ground two hours before.
The Taj Mahal, with the Yamuna river snaking away towards its source in the Himalayas.
The Taj Mahal as the day's first tourists trickle through the gates.
The Lotus Temple, dotted with pigeons at sunrise. Designed by an Iranian exile, the building serves as the centre of the Bahai'i faith in Delhi.
St. Petersburg From Above
Autumn in the amber city: When photographer Amos Chapple sent a small drone helicopter up into the skies above Saint Petersburg his airborne cameras have captured stunning images of the Russian city, bathed in an orange, gold and red autumnal glow.
The Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood during a squally autumn morning. The church marks the spot where the reformist Tsar Alexander II was assassinated by a bomb-rolling revolutionary.
The Hermitage Pavilion wreathed in dawn mist. The little "whipped cream" pavilion was an example of the decadence which would eventually topple the Tsarist autocracy. It was famous for parties where tables laden with food would rise from beneath the floorboards into groups of delighted guests.
The Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood was built only as an epitaph to the murdered Tsar and wasn't intended for public worship. A patch of the cobbled street on which the Tsar lay mortally wounded is preserved within the old church, now open to the public as a museum.
Visitors walk on fallen leaves in the Summer Garden, central St. Petersburg's oldest Park.