Last updated by Nick S. on 23/06/2017

An interview with Eddie Codel, founder of the Flying Robot International Drone Film Festival.

    

As an early adopter, Eddie has done a lot of drone work at events as well as other commercial and creative work with drones so we wanted to give you some insight into how drones and events can go together and what to look out for and what to inspire your events with! (Hint: to see some of the amazing work that can be done with drones, check out the Flying Robot international Drone Film Festival, which Eddie is the founder of).

 

What are some of the main types of drone shots that are most useful in the events industry?

A couple drone shots that work well for events are the orbit and the dronie. An orbit is where you circumnavigate around a point of interest with the drone’s camera fixed inward. It’s a cinematic way of showcasing a particular venue or event.

Dronies are always fun, which are essentially drone based selfies. A dronie begins as a close-up of one or more people and zooms (flies) out to an extremely wide shot that showcases the venue and the surrounding area, such as a cityscape or mountains.


What are some innovative uses of drones you’ve done and/or would love to do?

Some uses outside of aerial photography are in Film and TV. This is something that is becoming more commonplace in small business promotion. For pure fun, flying or racing mini-quads is always a hit. When it comes to racing drones and making movies there are people that are a lot better at it than me, which is one reason I started a film festival specifically for drone-based filmmakers.

What are some misconceptions about drones and drone use?

A big misconception some people have is that you can just pick up a drone and start flying. Drones are definitely easier to operate than ever before, but there are safety considerations and laws in place regarding where and when one can fly. 

There are many places where it’s unsafe and illegal to fly a drone which could land a naive drone pilot in hot water. If you plan on making money with your drone, you have to become CASA certified That requires understanding regulations, airspace classes, sectional maps and understanding aviation weather reports among other things. Getting your certification is a requirement for any sort of commercial work, including simply monetizing your online drone videos with ads.


How did you get into using drones?

I jumped down the drone rabbit hole four years ago after watching a friend shoot a beautiful short summer video at conference event in Palm Springs. When I  saw the resulting video I was hooked. I soon pieced together my own camera drone rig with a GoPro, motorized gimbal and video downlink system. Back then, there was no all-in-one solution like is common with today’s drones, you had to piece together the components to build your aerial photography platform. I brought my rig to Burning Man in 2013, resulting in a video that clocked up almost 2 million views in a week.


What do you see coming as trends and evolutions of drones and drone usage?

Consumer drones will continue to become smaller, cheaper, smarter and safer. DJI, the undisputed leader in the consumer drone space, has just released their smallest and cheapest drone yet.  It can be completely controlled through gestures. I see more autonomous features and AI being integrated as drones continue to evolve.

Read full article




Get some quotes for a drone operator

âś” 100% free service
âś” Featured in the SMH, The Age & WA Today
âś” 1,800+ online recommendations

get quote image


<< Back to News