Our cities after dark: Photographer spends one year thousands of metres above the world's greatest metropolises to capture stunning images
- Pulitzer Prize winning photographer Vincent Laforet has captured incredible aerial night images of major cities
- Through advances in photographic technology and software he has been able to capture cities lit up at night
- Mr Laforet captured the images over the course of a year from a helicopter, 2.2 kilometres up in the air
Incredible
photography has captured a new side of the world's most famous cities
under the cover of darkness and from thousands of metres in the air.
Pulitzer Prize winning photographer Vincent Laforet captured the amazing night images of Sydney as part of his AIR Project in July.
Known
for his post 9/11 coverage in Afghanistan and Pakistan, Mr Laforet took
on years and flew by helicopter to 2.2 kilometres in the air at night
to capture her images of Sydney, New York, Los Angeles, Barcelona and London.
Renowned photographer Vincent Laforet captured amazing aerial images of Sydney at night from a
helicopter
Mr Laforet called Sydney an one of his favourite cities because of icons like the Opera House and Harbour Bridge
'I came to Sydney because it's one of my
favourite cities. It's got a very iconic series of images, the Opera
House, Harbour Bridge, but it's also got an incredible and unique
terrain,' Mr Laforet said in a report by The Australian.
The
acclaimed director and photographer called it 'one of the most amazing
projects' he had ever been part of because of the reaction to the images
saying the images have not only appealed to photographers but to
ordinary people.
'What
I found was that I was one of the first people, if not the first to go
up to 7500 feet (2.2km) or above and photograph these cities in a way
that few people had seen before.'
Mr Laforet traveled around the world to major cities like San Francisco
(pictured) capturing images and illuminating the roads, highways and
buildings at night
Laforet captures the lights of New Jersey (left), Manhattan (centre) and
Brooklyn (right) at night from a great height in a helicopter
The city that never sleeps: The bright lights of Times Square (centre) in the middle of Manhattan, New York
Advances in photographic technology and software have allowed Mr Laforet to show the cities roads and highways lit up at night.
'This
is the only time to capture something like this, with the mix between
old, yellow-tinted lights and new, bright, blueish LED street lights' he
said.
He
said that working from a high altitude: 'the city feels so much more
within grasp, and you can see how much smaller the world is.'
Mr Laforet was hosted by Canon Australia to capture the images in July as part of his soon to be released book called 'Air'
The neon lights of the resort and casino capital Las Vegas contrasting against the pitch black of the night sky
As the sun sets over Los Angeles, the city's lights being glow revealing the many roads and highways
Yellow, blue and violet lights glow along the River Thames in this
aerial view of a part of London, highlighting the city's icons like the
London Bridge (top centre)
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