AirPano’s
Incredible Views by
Drones
AirPano
captured famous cities and
natural
landscapes
from above, mainly with the use
of
drones.
Famous
cities such as New York,
Singapore, and
Barcelona
are shown in a new perspective.
The
team consists of nine
photographers and three
tech
specialists.
Dubai
never ceases to impress, but
this aerial
shot
of the skyline by AirPano shows
the city in an incredible new
light.
Only a
photograph from above like this
one can
demonstrate
the vast size of the Angel Falls
in
Venezuela.
This
perfectly ordered city is
Barcelona in Spain
-
captured in the middle is the
famous Sagrada Familia
church.
A
perfectly captured picture of
the Victoria
Falls
in Zambia.
Iguacu
Falls, Argentina, is just one of
the
stunning
aerial shots shown off in
AirPano's spectacular
collection.
(How do
people get out
there?)
Winter
wonderland! A stunning photo of
Mount
Everest,
Earth's highest mountain,
located in the Mahalangur
section of
the
Himalayas.
New
perspective! It could confuse at
first, but
this
is actually the Arc de Triomphe
in Paris, photographed entirely
from
above.
Concrete
jungle lit up! A magical
panoramic shot
of
Manhattan City Line at night,
with the Empire State Building
gleaming
to the
left and the Chrysler building
towards the center.
AirPano
perfectly shot Manhattan in New
York,
with
views for miles stretching out
in the background.
Looking
down, down under! Australia's
barrier
reef
looks a brilliant shade of
turquoise in this landscape
capture.
See the
Taj Mahal from a new angle! The
Indian
landmark
has been captured many times
before, but the team took a new
perspective.
One of
the spectacular wonders of the
world from
above.
The Ha Long island dotted in the
Vietnamese
bay.
Flecks
of white in the blue ocean,
frozen Iceland
as you
have never seen it before.
The
team mainly use drones to take
their
photographs.
Looking
like something out of a fairy
tale is
Neuschwanstein
Castle in Germany, captured in
the midst of the rolling
mountains.
The
Pyramids in Egypt made AirPano's
100 Best
Places
on the Planet list,
which
the team set out to capture over
the years
since
they started in 2006.
Project
coordinator Sergey Semenov
revealed that
after
initially working with
Spherical
panoramas on land, the group
decided to
take
to the skies.
Pictured
here is the Singapore Flyer.