Lucas Gilman
Filmmaker + Adventure Photographer
Lucas Gilman
Adventure Photographer
Lucas regularly works with editorial and advertising clients that span the globe including: National Geographic, Sports Illustrated, ESPN Magazine, ESPN.com, Men’s Journal, Outside Magazine, Men’s Fitness, Maxim Germany, FHM Australia, and the New York Times. His commercial clients include: SanDisk Professional, Nikon, Red Bull, Land Rover, SanDisk, Apple, Adobe, Garmin, Patagonia, Topo Designs, Gore-Tex, and K2 Skis.
Featured Project
"As a professional, you have to separate yourself from the pack. You must deliver assets on time and have your clients trust you."
It began with fly fishing. As a boy, Lucas Gilman’s dad would take him and his fly fishing clients to the far reaches of Costa Rica, New Zealand, South America, and beyond, always in search of the next great catch. For young Gilman, the landscapes were the true prize. They inspired in him a love of traveling and the outdoors that would someday help shape him into one of the most widely respected adventure photographers in the world.
Gilman is under no illusion that artistic vision and inspiration are solely responsible for his success, though. The technical side of his profession remains equally, if not even more critical, for keeping his business thriving.
"With the economy the way it is, every job is possibly your last job with clients, and what you produce is really critiqued a lot more than it used to be," says Gilman. "There isn’t really the option to say, ‘Oh, it didn’t work out this time,’ because that client will no longer be your client ever again. Having trust in my drives, knowing that I’m going to be able to deliver assets as promised, is a real big concern. That’s why I use SanDisk Professional drives."
Stumbles on the Road to Success
A first glance at Gilman’s epic photograph of someone climbing a frozen waterfall might inspire wonder, both at the subject, the composition, and the technical quality of the image. But for Gilman, it was still a learning experience.
"That was absolutely miserable," he laughs. "It was 14 below zero in the shade, just standing on a block of ice all day. The camera is rubberized on the outside, but the internal frame is magnesium alloy. It’s like you’re holding a metal brick steadily sucking the heat out of your hands."
Learning experiences are never easy. Like most professional photographers and cinematographers we interview, Gilman has a technical tragedy in his past. Back in the era when 80GB hard drives were considered very large, he had one such drive fail on him with no warning. He describes the event as not being "the end of the world," but he did lose work for two key reasons: 1) he was using consumer-grade drives and 2) he didn’t have a backup strategy in place. This is the hallmark of an amateur. According to Gilman, professionals either learn how to protect their livelihood — or they don’t stay professional for long.
Gilman notes that he used to buy storage products for the way they looked, the image they projected alongside his Mac equipment, always assuming that what was inside the box matched the quality of the outside. Too often, that was not the case. Moreover, he found a disturbing number of cases in which vendors started off providing professional-class storage equipment and then, without warning, changed to a lower class of drive performance.
"There’s nothing worse than taking a lot of time and effort into a system and then having that system go consumer rather than professional," says Gilman. "I like the fact that G-Technology continually tries to provide resources and/or hardware equipment to support professional photographers and videographers in the film industry. I feel that they’ve made a real commitment to do that, which is important to me."
Follow the bits
About 50% of Gilman’s business is still photography (usually Nikon’s NEF RAW format), but for motion he shoots in 8K Apple ProRes RAW and 8K RED R3D format, depending on the end application. All stills and video are captured to professional grade SanDisk SD, CFexpress cards, or RED MINI-MAG’s, which then copy via MacBook Pro to two PRO-BLADE SSD Mags throughout shooting in the field. These are 2TB Thunderbolt 3 drives, and the fast transfers are simultaneous to ensure data redundancy as soon in the workflow as possible. When those drives fill up, two more get brought in. At the end of the day, the drives are geographically separated, often with Gilman taking one set and his assistant the other, taking care that both data sets are never in the same place at the same time.
When he returns home, Gilman takes one of his PRO-BLADE SSD sets and copies everything either to two G-RAID® Shuttle 8 devices or to two Shuttle SSDs with Thunderbolt 3, so there are two copies in this location, as well. Gilman uses the G-RAID® Shuttle 8 devices for photos and archiving, while Thunderbolt 3 Shuttle SSDs, fuel all of his video editing owing to their exceptional bandwidth and performance.
"I can’t have bottlenecks in my workflow," he says. "That’s why I rely on the Thunderbolt 3 drives for that extra speed. This gives me a really seamless editing process, with no frame dropping."
Bytes of Wisdom
Ask Gilman for his professional advice and you’ll hear one phrase often repeated: "Shoot everything and save everything." He deletes nothing from his camera when shooting and refuses to self-edit in the field. Occasionally, this pays off. He notes having once been in Costa Rica to shoot a kayaking story. At one point, he pulled off to the side of a road and photographed "some random eco-lodge" for fun. Five or six years later, he ended up turning those photos into a story for Conde Nast Traveler, a job that not only paid for his trip but netting him a new client.
This "accidental" job was made possible by his practice of never deleting and being assiduous about organizing images so they’re readily accessible. Gilman makes copious use of keyword tagging. He also archives very methodically, believing that saving and organizing data is just as important as making the shots.
For Lucas Gilman, having the right gear is the backbone of his profession. In some ways he values his hard drives even more than his cameras and lenses, because once those zeroes and ones vanish, they’re gone forever. Nothing will crush a career faster than data loss.
PRO-TEAM members are leaders in their respective fields who use SanDisk Professional products in their day-to-day work lives. PRO-TEAM members are compensated for their participation.
SanDisk Professional external hard drives serve as an element of an overall backup strategy. It is recommended that users keep two or more copies of their most important files backed up or stored on separate devices or online services.