[Video] With a special visit from the moon
This would be my most 'ambitious' time lapse video ever. 4862 images (average a thousand taken each day and drastically sped up). In addition to the usual sunrise and sunset, there's a bit of a moonset. And a star trail. Sorry about the clouds obscuring the stars, they just suddenly showed up.
Also, turn the volume up, you might like the music for once. It's HD, you can go fullscreen too.
Also, good news everyone! I have found a way of automating the process of taking time lapse videos. That's right, it means I don't even need to BE there as the camera's taking photos - some of this video was created in that way.
Just connect the camera to the laptop, run the command below, and it'll take photos and keep transferring them straight to the laptop, so no space constraints either. It even works with primitive technologies such as "Canons".
gphoto2 --auto-detect --force-overwrite --capture-image-and-download --frames 0 --interval 10 --filename "%Y%m%d%H%M%S.jpg"
The --frames 0 is forever, and the files go into the current directory.
[Video] With a special visit from the moon
This would be my most 'ambitious' time lapse video ever. 4862 images (average a thousand taken each day and drastically sped up). In addition to the usual sunrise and sunset, there's a bit of a moonset. And a star trail. Sorry about the clouds obscuring the stars, they just suddenly showed up.
Also, turn the volume up, you might like the music for once. It's HD, you can go fullscreen too.
Also, good news everyone! I have found a way of automating the process of taking time lapse videos. That's right, it means I don't even need to BE there as the camera's taking photos - some of this video was created in that way.
Just connect the camera to the laptop, run the command below, and it'll take photos and keep transferring them straight to the laptop, so no space constraints either. It even works with primitive technologies such as "Canons".
gphoto2 --auto-detect --force-overwrite --capture-image-and-download --frames 0 --interval 10 --filename "%Y%m%d%H%M%S.jpg"
The --frames 0 is forever, and the files go into the current directory.