View allAll Photos Tagged Timelapse
A short timelapse movie showing the motion of asteroid 3200 Phaethon against the background stars in the constellation of Perseus on the 13th December.
Not the most exciting looking imagery I've posted, but I was delighted that the simple toolkit of a DSLR, telephoto lens and Star Adventurer tracking mount enabled this footage of a passing 5km wide lump of space rock to be captured during fleeting gaps in the cloud.
This asteroid is the source of the space debris that produces the Geminid Meteor shower each December.
Another flight over Florida and the Bahamas and onto North-East South America, but it is the cloud formations that steal the show this time!
Les formations nuageuses et leurs innombrables déclinaisons, des Antilles aux côtes de l’Amérique du sud...
Credits: ESA/NASA
GMT119_20_18_
One photo per minute for 24 hours. It goes red at the end there because it's opening at night. plantgasm.com/archives/5274
14th November 2016 (Sorry its only very short but this was my first attempt at time lapsing the moon, hopefully i will get around to doing more)
Trying out time lapse flower bloom.
1050+ photos in 19hrs.
Shot with a7III + Tamron 28-75mm F2.8 + extension tubes.
Filmed last night from 4:30 to 7:30 am. I saw some nice aurora and grabbed the camera but it diffused out by the time I had the camera ready... but I noticed basically the whole sky was still covered in diffuse aurora which was clearly visible to the camera. I've been thinking lately that diffuse and pulsating aurora actually make more interesting timelapses than the normal discrete arcs everybody photographs, so I left the camera out on the porch filming and went to bed. This is what was on it when I woke up.
Just a normal morning at FlickrHQ. Video ends around lunch time, explaining the lack of people at the end.
I'm really having fun with these iPhone timelapse videos.
Timelapse with SONY NEX-5T with SELP1650 lens.
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By choosing to track the stars, weirdly the Earth turns in this timelapse sequence - which it does of course, but we rarely look at it from this reference point.
2 hours in 150 frames. Captured lots of satellites and couple of early Perseids I think.
Saturn lower left, Jupiter lower right, Altair top left.
Canon 600D, 18mm kit lens f4.5
45s exposures, ISO3200
Skywatcher Star Adventurer mount
Processed in Photoshop and rendered in VirtualDub
A timelapse from my star trail image of Skipwith Common. Taken from 130 images at iso 400 with 30 second exposures. The Samyang 14mm set to f2.8. Always nice to get a little extra from the star trail image. Not a clear night by any means but the cloud movement adds so much to the time-lapse. Love the way the different atmospheric wind directions show up on the video.
Comments and Critic are highly appreciated.
Description: Since I began taking timelapse in October last year, shooting time-lapse of the MW and the stars have been always on my top list. As the skies in Malaysia started to clear of the thick clouds, I went to the secluded Darul Quran in Selangor to do the shooting. However, due to my own fault, I arrived late at location with only less than 1 hour to sunrise and thus I was struggling to find a good setting as I have not been shooting the stars for quite a while. I definitely have to re-visit again.
Filter: Singh Ray RGND 0.9
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