Since 1993, Prairie Pictures’ StormStock has been the class leader in the production and licensing of premium weather footage.
Read MoreAn image titled, “Tornadic Supercell over Goldenrod” won a stills competition hosted by the London-based Royal Photographic Society (RPS) this week. What makes it unique is the image is actually a still pulled from the 16K short film “Prairie Wind,” shot and directed by StormStock founder and cinematographer Martin Lisius.
Read MoreStormStock, the world's leading authority on storm footage, has been busy the past few weeks keeping up with the weather.
Read MoreLisius and his team of shooters were able to capture Hurricane Harvey from various locations. The team photographed intense wind and rain, aerials of submerged homes and cars, flood rescues and evacuations, interviews with victims, and relief efforts.
Read MoreFounder and filmmaker Martin Lisius captured a series of tornadoes in southwest Iowa for his StormStock collection earlier this summer.
Read MoreStormStock includes the only HD collection of Hurricane Katrina making landfall, shot by Lisius, and significant material from other named storms such as Sandy, Ike and Matthew. This summer, Lisius captured a series of photogenic tornadoes in Iowa on DCI 4K.
Read More“We were able to capture the usual things like horizontal rain, trees bending over and debris flying through the air and scraping across the ground,” Lisius said. “But the most amazing scene we encountered was in Moss Point, Mississippi where we came upon a parking lot that was flooding with storm surge and covering cars...
Read More"To do what I do, I have to not only be a skilled cinematographer, but I have to understand how to operate in and around storms safely. That's a pretty unique set of skills," Lisius said. Lisius has taken what he's learned about extreme weather and shared it with the public in a book titled, The Ultimate Severe Weather Safety Guide.
Read MoreLast week, it was business as usual as he followed major Hurricane Matthew along the Florida coast, bracing against 90 mph winds, and enduring stinging, horizontal rain. "Yes, the rain actually stings if you aren't completely covered," Lisius said.
Read More"I've only seen a handful of mega-supercells in my 30 years of photographing storms," said Lisius who does his own forecasting. "The Sand Hills storm was rotating hard and was almost fully on the ground at times. It was like a massive vacuum cleaner and a tennis ball size ice machine maker rolled into one...
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