View allAll Photos Tagged Timelapse
mi affascinano molto questi video formati da centinaia di foto, questo è il mio primo approccio a questa tecnica.
February 18, the night of the rocket launch. More of that pretty red blob that develops to the right of the building.
Click for all my aurora photos. And I has more timelapses if you like this one.
Frames taken with GoPro Hero 4 Session during 165 minutes, with 5 sec intervals. Video projection frame rate: 24 fps.
(Black areas on sides are added by the OpenShot video editor which forces video to 16:9 when converted to "Flickr-HD" target.)
First EVER timelapse.
Not the most interesting subject.
I left it on at home when I went to work (it's still shooting, I just tried putting this clip together remotely from work).
So far, I messed up with leaving autofocus ON and setting the wrong whitebalance.
It shoots 5 exposures (-2/-1/0/+1/+2) in jpeg small, batch edited in photomatix, imported in lightroom and cropped to 1920x1080, then put together in quicktime. Looks like crap, but it's a start! :)
5 exposures HDR'ed to 1 shot and run at 30 FPS.
So... this video consists of 3625 shots.
I'll replace this one when the rest is rendered.
My first GoPro Timelapse
991 images, taken every 2 seconds.
two frames were totally blown out during a gap in the clouds, so i had to remove them but other than that i'm quite happy with it.
I ran all the frames through Lightroom, to fix the horizon and apply some noise reduction.
A timelapse video of a lily flower blooming using 460 images taken over 6 days. Apologies for the moving flower as it was totally shot from a garden and had limited control over lighting and wind movements.
Aurora in the early morning of Sep 18.
Click for all my aurora photos.And I has more timelapses if you like this one.
Making-of Images of the Christophmalin.com TimeLapse Movie "The Island" about the wonderful nature and starry skies of La Palma, Canary Islands.
A timelapse of the clouds rolling over the famous Quiraing on the Isle of Skye.
The wind up here this particular day was pretty damn strong which meant me having to not only weigh down the tripod to prevent it blowing off the cliff in front, but also sitting holding onto it from time to time when even the weight didn't do the full job.
Rain played a part too in this one at various times, so the camera had it's very own rain hood installed, which makes a brief appearance near the end of the sequence.
Plenty of stuff to watch out for in this one, the tourists going back and forth on the path to the left, the clouds overhead, the little sheep which move around in the lower section of the frame.
This year (2016), I was fortunate enough to gain permission to photograph the main stage being built for the Isle of Wight Festival for a timelapse video. The stage is built over three days,and the resulting video is just less than 90 seconds long. Frames were taken one minute apart, and played back at 24 fps, so for every second of video, 24 minutes have elapsed. I was absolutely chuffed to see my video played in full on the big screens which were placed stageside. The experience really went a long way to extending my festival time, and was both fascinating and very enjoyable.