I am still mind trippin’ over how Oro Padron stitched these drone films together. 40K resolution. Well, 40,960 to be exact. That is the total width of the aerial video panorama we shot and edited for Madison House sales gallery.

1. Climb to Madison House rooftop. 2. Strap RED Epic-Weapon Helium to Dinero. 3. Ascend from 400 to 600 feet altitude sequentially in five different directions. Oh yea, and this was done twice. At sunset and dusk. Keep reading.

Gabor Cseh, correct me if I am wrong. These are the first 40K drone films of this kind. Ever. To stitch ten 8K portions of moving drone video to form two seamless films captured during the most light-fluctuating times of day is asinine.



DBOX = GOAT. Madison House sales gallery. 60 screens, 1 film.

JD Carlisle. Gachot Studios. Everything happens when it should.



8K resolution stills from raw video. That color science though.

Going back to my roots. Series 44 style. Sideways, upside down.



Madison House. Luxury residences. NoMad District. The views.

Handel Architects on design deck. Corner exposures abundant.



No Guidance

Shout out to David Clausen, my high school journalism teacher, who told me it was bad taste to partially crop objects out of the frame. I never listened to him. This is where stubborn and perspective start to make out. NSFW.

The most dangerous submissive statement a person can make is, “That is the way it has always been done.” While Mr. Clausen was simply referring to traditional editorial guidelines, his teachings transcended belief systems.

My entire senior year I deliberately cropped-off hands, elbows, and feet in photos while designing the school newspaper. Nowadays, I crop off skyscrapers and rotate frames by 180 degrees. He different. Cameron, my dogg.