View allAll Photos Tagged Timelapse
Making-of Images of the Christophmalin.com TimeLapse Movie "The Island" about the wonderful nature and starry skies of La Palma, Canary Islands.
I thought Pelican Cove on the Palos Verdes Peninsula would be the perfect place to do a night sky - faces south, foreground interest, and I expected it to be dark since it looks square out into the ocean and the Island of Santa Catalina "26 miles across the sea". The megalopolis of Los Angeles was out of sight behind me, on the opposite side of the hilly peninsula, the weather was clear, and the quarter moon wasn't due to rise for another 3 hours. Rather, not only did that orange glow from the city spill into my sky making the Milky Way barely discernible, but it turned out I forgot about the local airports and, well, the busy ocean shipping lanes. So ... this is a timelapse of about an hour, condensed into about 25 seconds, music by David Wurst. If you look hard, you CAN see that Milky Way travel east to west (left to right) across the sky. And the ships and planes going every which way are just plain crazy...last frame is a stack of the entire series.
Another timelapse from Kitt Peak. The Spacewatch telescopes are to the left and Bok and Mayall 4-meter telescope in the distance.
This is my first ever time lapse. I kept it simple and just pointed it to the sky.
Had timer set to 10 sec intervals.
Settings were f11 and 1/1000
I love the way that sounds. But I think this video clip can hardly go for a real timelapse . It's lack of foreground strips the authenticity of it and looks as if I've animated a still-photo across the frame. The only little proof of authenticity I have is the flicker caused by nearby cars. I didn't have any time to do anything proper, I ran outside my house at 7:50 this morning and only had a few minutes to spare - my little baby girl needed taking care of. In a perfect world I would have had a telescope-tracking dolly prepared with a much, much longer lens, and a few hours to spare. But as usual, music makes all the difference in the world. The sound is from Biosphere's Substrata - one of my top-ten most favourite ambient albums of all time (yes, I have a top-ten of ambient albums). It's also the first ever internet purchase I've ever made -back in 1997, even Amazon.com was in it's infancy back then.
Video was shot with the Carl Zeiss Makro-Planar T* 2/100 ZE, which is, unfortunately for this scenario, the longest lens I have. The first shot of this clip is 1920x1080px crop from the 21-megapixel original, the second clip is uncropped 21megapixels scaled down 65% to fit 1920x1080.
30 seconds of zen from Lake Tahoe
Timelapse footage compiled via Prism Camera, El Dorado Beach, South Lake Tahoe, CA
February 20, 2014
Music: Mike Andrews | Logical
(CC) Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Netherlands License. Based on a work at wiki.creativecommons.org. Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available at audiofarm.org/mikeandrews.
Making-of Images of the Christophmalin.com TimeLapse Movie "The Island" about the wonderful nature and starry skies of La Palma, Canary Islands.
CHECK OUT www.denissmith.com.au
Yet another play with the dolly. I know this only short, but time has been very limited. I have made the decision to post all of my time lapse stuff. So sorry for the rubbish.
still working on image quality. more soon...
#! /bin/sh
# whatever you want to be your directory of files
cd ~/Pictures/OMPD
# make a subdirectory with today's date, then go to it.
mkdir `date +%Y-%m-%d`
cd `date +%Y-%m-%d`
counter=1000
# at 15 seconds per shot, 4/min, 240/hr, 10 hours = 2400 shots
# while [ $counter -ne 3400 ] # run a fixed number of shots.
while [ `date +%H` -lt 23 ] # if it's less that 11pm
#while [ 1 ] # run all the time
do
let "counter+=1"
echo $counter
#echo $counter # if you want to see the progression on the terminal window
# capture a JPG screenshot
#screencapture -m -x -t jpg screen${counter:1}.jpg
wacaw --jpeg webcam${counter:1}.jpg
# resize images using imagemagick here?
#convert webcam${counter:1}.jpg.jpeg -resize 95% webcam${counter:1}.jpg
#convert webcam${counter:1}.jpg.jpeg -resize 95% webcam${counter:1}.jpg
mv webcam${counter:1}.jpg.jpeg webcam${counter:1}.jpg
#convert screen${counter:1}.jpg -resize 50% screen${counter:1}.jpg
# capture an image from the webcam using wacaw package. get from sourceforge
#
# download zip file. unzip. run these two things at command line
# sudo cp wacaw /usr/local/bin; sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/wacaw
echo yofool
# number of seconds between shots
sleep 15
# make a beep here? display a shot onscreen?
done
# one shot/15sec, played at 10 fps = 150x speedup. 150min(2.5hr) = 1 min vid. 10hrs = 4min
#
#
#ffmpeg -r 20 -b 5000 -i screen%03d.jpg ~/Movies/AUTOUPLOAD/`date +%Y%m%dmovie`OMPD.mp4
ffmpeg -r 20 -b 5000 -i webcam%03d.jpg ~/Movies/AUTOUPLOAD/`date +%Y%m%dmovie`webcam-timelapse.mp4
# -b 5000 to limit movie size.
# about mac cron jobs on laptops and sleep times
after 9 months of nerding it up behind the gentle glow of my laptop screen, I've finally given birth to my first app baby.
it's pretty simple, but it will help you calculate how many minutes of timelapse video footage you'll get from your many dedicated hours of shooting.
it'll even email the results to your best friend. oh yes. yes it will.
download it from the apple app store if you're into that sort of thing, or build your own version from the source code.
i'd love to hear your thoughts / suggestions / rants / love / hate / how your day was.
kudos to dan for his math code and pix for his help!
si.
Time lapse of evening at Church Farm, Ardeley, 23/07/16-24/07/16.
Canon EOS 1000D - 1540 x 8second exposure @ ISO1600.
I wanted to observe the change of the sky as the sun sets. To do this, I to do it as a timelapse of 21 photos taken every minute (10 before and 10 after) stitched into one image, which effectively shows the darkening of the sky and loss of vibrant color.
Editing all of them was not difficult, but took time, because I am still learning how to effectively use Photoshop. I learned lots about layer masks and using the brush to remove parts of an image.
The most difficult part was actually taking the photos. I had to bring all of my equipment on top of my roof, which is extremely steep, and set up a tripod over a peak, to get above the neighboring houses and clearly see the skyline. But I managed to balance the tripod and kept it still the whole time I was taking the photos.
All around, I am extremely happy with how it turned out, especially with my little experience with editing photos.
Making-of Images of the Christophmalin.com TimeLapse Movie "The Island" about the wonderful nature and starry skies of La Palma, Canary Islands.
This series of 36 images of a rose opening took over 9 hours to complete, one image every 15 minutes.
Making-of Images of the Christophmalin.com TimeLapse Movie "The Island" about the wonderful nature and starry skies of La Palma, Canary Islands.
Día anterior a la SuperLuna del 20161114.
Zaragoza. El Ebro y el Pilar
324 tomas (cada 20"); 14.00 mm; f/2.8; Velocidad de obturación e ISO varian en función de la exposición.
Tiempo de exposición: 17:53:44 – 19:42:21
La luna, gibosa creciente, alumbrando al 99%, a una distancia de 363.402,33 Km. Salía a las 17:25.
Timelapse: 25 fps (13")
It was the previous day to the Super Full Moon of 20161114.
Saragossa. The Ebro River and the Pilar.
324 shots (every 20"); 14.00 mm; f / 2.8; the shutter speed and ISO were different because of the exposure.
Time Exposure: 17:53:44 - 19:42:21
The Moon, rising gibbous, lighting at 99%, distance: 363,402.33 Km. The Moonrise was at 17:25.
Timelapse: 25 fps (13 ")