iSky Films Aerial Photography: Elevating Perspectives and Redefining Drone Services

iSky Films Aerial Photography: Elevating Perspectives and Redefining Drone Services
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aerial photography, drone photography, drone companies, commercial drones, drone services, drone photography near me, real estate drone photography

PHOENIX, ARIZONA, UNITED STATE, July 30, 2023/EINPresswire.com/ — iSky Films Aerial Photography, a pioneering force in the realm of aerial imagery, is revolutionizing various industries with cutting-edge drone technology and unparalleled services. From breathtaking aerial photography to dynamic drone videography, iSky Films offers an array of solutions that cater to diverse clientele seeking innovative and captivating visual content.

Aerial photography has become an indispensable tool across industries, and iSky Films stands at the forefront, providing top-notch services to meet the growing demand. Specializing in real estate drone photography, construction drone services, and drone mapping, iSky Films employs a team of skilled professionals and utilizes state-of-the-art commercial drones to deliver exceptional results.

“We are thrilled to be leading the way in the aerial photography industry,” said [Spokesperson Name], spokesperson for iSky Films Aerial Photography. “Our passion for flying and capturing stunning visuals from above drives us to continuously explore new horizons in drone technology.”

iSky Films’ real estate drone photography services empower real estate professionals with captivating imagery that showcases properties from a unique and immersive perspective. Through skillful maneuvering of their drones, iSky Films captures alluring aerial shots that capture the attention of potential buyers, effectively elevating the marketing efforts of real estate listings.

The use of drones in construction has seen significant growth, and iSky Films meets this demand with their specialized drone inspection services. By utilizing drones equipped with advanced imaging technology, iSky Films provides construction companies with invaluable data for project management, site analysis, and safety evaluations. This commitment to enhancing construction processes has earned iSky Films a reputation as one of the most reliable and trusted construction drone companies.

As an American drone company, iSky Films takes pride in offering comprehensive drone services nationwide. Clients searching for “drone photography near me” or “drone services near me” can rely on iSky Films’ widespread network of skilled pilots, ensuring prompt and efficient service across the country. This extensive reach has also solidified iSky Films’ position as one of the premier drone companies in California, serving clients with exceptional aerial cinematography and drone videography services.

Drone mapping has emerged as an essential tool in data visualization and analysis, and iSky Films takes it to new heights with their expertise in mapping services. Using cutting-edge technology, iSky Films creates detailed 3D models and maps for various applications, including urban planning, agriculture, and environmental monitoring. Additionally, the company’s proficiency in FPV drone videography enhances the immersive experience of aerial footage, providing clients with dynamic and captivating content.

Safety is paramount in the drone industry, and iSky Films upholds strict compliance with all regulations and industry standards. Their commitment to responsible flying has earned them the trust of clients and sets them apart as a dependable choice for drone photography and videography services.

As iSky Films Aerial Photography continues to soar to new heights, their dedication to excellence and innovation remains unwavering. With an ever-expanding range of services and a commitment to providing unparalleled visuals, iSky Films is set to redefine the possibilities of aerial photography and drone services across industries.

About iSky Films Aerial Photography:
iSky Films Aerial Photography is a leading provider of aerial photography, drone videography, and drone services based in Phoenix, Arizona. With a skilled team of drone pilots and videographers, the company offers a wide range of services, including real estate drone photography, construction drone services, and drone mapping. Committed to excellence and innovation, iSky Films continues to redefine perspectives through the lens of its cutting-edge drone technology.

For media inquiries, please contact:
Mr. Shayne Chatteron, Founder
iSky Films Aerial Photography
Phone: 480-442-2737
Address: 1601 E Highland Ave, Phoenix, AZ 85016

Mr. Shayne Chatteron
iSky Films Aerial Photography
+1 480-442-2737
email us here
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Wheelwright exhibit ‘Always in Relation’ showcases a couple’s lifetime love of Indigenous art

Wheelwright exhibit ‘Always in Relation’ showcases a couple’s lifetime love of Indigenous art

When Ruth Schultz moved to Albuquerque from Louisiana with her husband Sidney, it was with considerable trepidation.

“She said she was a reluctant transplant, and she didn’t unpack for a year,” said Henrietta Lidchi, executive director of Santa Fe’s Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian. Then she discovered Native American art.

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Black Belt Eagle Scout’s latest record inspired by return home to Swinomish tribe’s ancestral lands

Black Belt Eagle Scout’s latest record inspired by return home to Swinomish tribe’s ancestral lands

The beginning of the pandemic was devasting for the leader of the indie rock band Black Belt Eagle Scout, Katherine Paul. All her tours, including one headlining across North America, were canceled and she feared her ascending music career might be over.

She got a day job at a nonprofit and returned to the Swinomish Indian Tribal Community’s homelands in Western Washington. But as Paul, or KP to her friends, spent time in the cedar forests and walked along the Skagit River, she turned to her guitar to deal with the isolation and stress. Those snippets, recorded on her phone, provided the foundation for what would become songs on her powerful, grunge-soaked new record “The Land, The Water, The Sky.”

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“I feel like if the pandemic hadn’t happened, I probably wouldn’t have made this record,” said KP, who writes the songs, sings and plays guitar in the band that was the only Native American artist at the Pitchfork Music Festival in Chicago this month.

FILE - Black Belt Eagle Scout performs during the Pitchfork Music Festival at Union Park in Chicago, Saturday, July 22, 2023.

FILE – Black Belt Eagle Scout performs during the Pitchfork Music Festival at Union Park in Chicago, Saturday, July 22, 2023.

Michael Casey / AP

“I spent a lot of time outside. I spent a lot more time than normal going on hikes, being part of the land,” she continued. “It’s not like I never do that stuff but it brought me back to a place where this is who I am.”

The new record, which came out in February, helped launch what has probably been the most successful year so far for Black Belt Eagle Scout. The band toured Europe and will go to Australia later this year. Two of her songs, “Soft Stud” from an earlier record and “Salmon Stinta” from her latest, appear this season on the television series “Reservation Dogs.”

Reservation Dogs Music Supervisor Tiffany Anders said she was introduced to the band’s music by the show’s creator, Sterlin Harjo, when they started working on the second season.

“It’s always been important for us on this show to include Native American artists, but beyond representation, Black Belt Eagle Scout’s music is beautiful and emotional, and fits these characters, their world and landscape — and the vibe of the show,’” she said in a statement.

Then there was Pitchfork, a three-day festival that is a significant milestone for indie musicians. The festival is held every year in Chicago’s Union Park and this year’s headliners included Bon Iver, Big Thief and The Smile, which has members of Radiohead.

She admitted stepping on that stage last weekend was nerve-wracking given her high hopes for the show, a feeling compounded by concerns that storms could scuttle their performance. But as she launched into the blistering set of mostly new songs in front of thousands of eager fans, KP found solace in her guitar. She launched several long jams that were punctuated by her twirling her jet-black hair around to the point it obscured her face.

“It was totally a moment,” she said with a laugh.

“I kind of cried after we played because it felt so meaningful,” she added. “Like, I’ve always wanted to play this music festival. I remember trying to play one of the years before the pandemic when I was touring and it didn’t happen. This year, I was just so stoked to play.”

Reaching Pitchfork has been a long journey for the 34-year-old artist, who is a member of the Swinomish Indian Tribal Community and left her home on the reservation in LaConner, Washington, when she was 17 to attend Lewis & Clark College in Oregon and play rock music.

Growing up on the reservation off the Washington coast on islands in the Salish Sea, she drummed and sang cultural songs. As a teenager, she discovered local Pacific Northwest bands like Mount Eerie and the sounds of the Riot Grrrl movement and played one of her first gigs at a small bar called Department of Safety. She moved to Portland, Oregon, due to its outsized role in the indie scene that featured bands like Sleater-Kinney and quickly immersed herself in the music scene playing drums and guitar.

Black Belt Eagle Scout, second right, performs during the Pitchfork Music Festival at Union Park in Chicago on Saturday, July 22, 2023.

Black Belt Eagle Scout, second right, performs during the Pitchfork Music Festival at Union Park in Chicago on Saturday, July 22, 2023.

Michael Casey / AP

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She joined an all-female outfit whom she met at the Rock ‘n’ Roll Camp for Girls in Portland. She went on to play a lot of small, basement shows with bands like Genders — whose wolf tattoo she still has on her left arm.

But she wanted to write her own songs and formed Black Belt Eagle Scout in 2013. Her early music was defined by her ethereal singing about love, friendship and healing — often only accompanied by minimal guitar strumming. But she did rock out on songs like “Soft Stud,” which featured searing solos.

“She is a really an authentic musician and she carries a lot of power on stage with her presence and sound,” Claire Glass, who plays guitar in the band and first saw KP seven years ago.

KP has said her Native American identify has always been present on her records. But her latest music paints a more vivid picture of life on the Swinomish reservation. There are references to chinook salmon, which are traditionally fished, and a powwow dance.

“I started thinking of feeling grateful for the life that I have been given; this place that I’m from; how much the land, the water, the sky means to me — being surrounded by it,” KP said of writing the song ”Don’t Give Up.” “It has so much more meaning because the land, that’s where my people are from.”

Her songs aren’t meant to directly confront issues like the crisis of missing and murdered Native American women or tribes’ forced relocation. It’s not the way she writes songs. Instead, she envisions them connecting with people, drawing more Native Americans to indie rock shows in places like Minneapolis, which has a vibrant Native American community, and inspiring young Native Americans to connect with her after shows.

“Isn’t me like being here existing with my music good enough? Can’t I just be who I am?” she asked, adding she doesn’t need to speak out from stage about these issues because being Native often means she is already wrestling with them. A judge, for example, ruled in March that BNSF Railway intentionally violated the terms of an easement agreement with the tribe by running 100-car trains carrying crude oil over the reservation.

“As a Native person, you know someone who is missing. Your tribe is trying to get your land back. Those are topics that are part of your every day life,” she said. ”I care about those things deeply but there are certain ways in which my music is, maybe not as direct, but it can be healing.”

KP also doesn’t want to be seen just as a rock musician or as a Native artist. “I am a musician who happens to be Native, but I am also a Native musician … I think I am always both,” she said.

Her latest record aims to show that.

“I kind of had in the back of mind, just kept thinking what would Built to Spill do,” KP said of the guitar-heavy, indie-rock band from the Pacific Northwest. “I’ve gone on tour with them and seen their three guitars at one point playing together and how they overlap and all these other things.”

It’s also a more collaborative effort with more musicians playing on the record— a departure for KP, who is accustomed to doing everything herself. A cellist who played with Nirvana, Lori Goldston, is featured on several songs, as are two violinists, as well as a saxophone and mellotron player.

Takiaya Reed, a first-time producer who is also in a doom metal band, described the experience of working on the record as “beautiful and amazing” and said the two bonded over their love of punk. Reid also brought her classical training and love of “heavier sounds” to the studio.

“We approached it fearlessly. It was wonderful to be expansive in terms of sonic possibilities,” she said.

KP also wanted to find a place for her parents, whom she had grown especially close to during the pandemic, to play on the record. She chose the song “Spaces,” which she described as having a “healing vibe.” Her dad, who is one of the main singers at the tribe’s cultural events, embraced the idea of lending his powerful powwow chant to the song. Her mom sang harmonies.

KP said: “It meant the world to me to have my parents sing because it felt like it was full circle in who I am.”

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DJ Memorial Photography contest concludes in Coimbatore

DJ Memorial Photography contest concludes in Coimbatore

Lakshmi Machine Works Limited (LMW) gave away prizes worth ₹10 lakh on Sunday to winners of the DJ Memorial Photography Contest (DJMPC), an annual photography contest

The winner and runner-up are Ashok Nair of Bengaluru (photo title: Attention) and Dharashan Benjamine Julian of Sri Lanka (Dark Killer) respectively in the “Creative Nature” category and Dhanuparan Ka of Pollachi (Leopard Scoutings Its Territory) and Rajarshi Banerji of Kolkata ( Soulmaters Over Saltpan) are the winner and runner-up respectively in the “NatureScape” category.

A press release said the company instituted the DJMPC in memory of its past Chairman and Managing Director, D Jayavarthanavelu and the contest celebrates his passion for photography. The first edition was held in 2012 and this year (2023) it had 5,116 entries from 26 countries. There were 936 participants in the two categories of Creative Nature and NatureScape. Apart from the winner and runner-up, 10 participants in each category received certificate of merit.

The entries were received from May 1 to June 30 and were judged by a panel – Anish Andheria, Mumbai; Lalith Ekanayake, Sri Lanka; and Sachin Rai, Bengaluru. K. Maruthachalam was the contest mentor, and Vikram Sathyanathan was the contest administrator.

The contest concluded on July 30 at the Kasthuri Sreenivasan Cultural Centre in Coimbatore and an expo of select photographs of the contest will be on at the centre till August 5.