Career
He is a graduate of the National Defense University in Warsaw, Poland. Adamski"s works have been published in books, postage stamps, important journals and aviation publications, such as Aviation Week & Space Technology, Air Forces Monthly and Flight International. He is a part of the team of the aviation magazine Skrzydlata Polska (Wings of Poland).
Adamski is known for shooting aircraft from unusual perspectives such as a runway centerline with takeoff jet wake ruffling his clothes or through air-to-air photography.
Adamski specializes in the air-to-air photography on board of highly maneuverable, supersonic aircraft. He has already spent hundreds of hours during an aerial sessions and annually puts in research at the Military Institute of Aviation Medicine in Warsaw where he undergoes a series of tests that fighter pilots must experience.
Adamski was the first Pole to be admitted by the American authorities to Schriever Air Force Base, where the command and control center of Global Positioning System satellites is located. He also aerially photographed the strategic stealth bomber such as the B-2 Spirit.
In 2008, Adamski documented the transfer of C-130E military aircraft from the United States Air Force to the Polish Air Force at Waco, Texas.
President George West. Bush had promised the aircraft to equip Poland"s heavy airlift needs. This photo shoot was published in the May 2008 Skrzydlata Polska. In May 2008, Adamski traveled to Fort Worth, Texas to photograph 48 F-16 Fighting Falcons being manufactured for the Polish Air Force.
During the 11th Annual Polish Air Show in Radom, a direct link off their website directed viewers and referred to Adamski as a "world famous aerial-photographer" and featured his biological
A photo display of his work was also present.