View allAll Photos Tagged Timelapse
My first timelapse
Taken during the afternoon of Melbourne Cup 2010 (November 2nd), roughly 12:45 - 20:00.
Flemington Racecourse is very slightly left of center of the frame, but not in view.
Initial frames are 45 seconds apart, then 30 seconds and finally 15 seconds.
Black dots are mostly helicopters which were filming the races during the afternoon.
Timelapse of a what happens when you squirt weedkiller on a dandelion. I was a little cynical but see the results for yourself.
Images take from 10:50am to 12:30pm with 30 second intervals. (Around 200 images)
Note to self: must remember to set to manual focus.
Timelapse of Venus and Taurus rising, shot with Move-Shoot-Move star tracker and RX100M7 at 68mm F5.0 ISO 640 with 8 second exposures. Caught a faint Aquarid meteor in one frame.
DCIM\101GOPRO
This is a shot from my fourth timelapse with the GoPro Hero.
I recently took a trip out to my Dad's for his birthday and mounted the GoPro on the hood of the car while leaving the city for the country.
bit.ly/​goprohero
Timelapse of ISS passing through Orion nebula. January 18 2021, 02:11:32-02:13:22 UTC. Canon G7 X, 40x2s, ISO 1600, 100mm EFL. Composite flic.kr/p/2ktaRZB
Saturn, December 15, 2020 01:53-01:55 UTC. Timelapse of frames cropped from flic.kr/p/2khocZw Canon SX730, 60x1/8s, ISO 80
Nosy Komba
Madagascar
One of the things I experimented with for the first time on the downtime of my honeymoon (there wasn't much) was timelapse videography. A good timelapse is captivating to watch and ideally tells a story or sets an atmosphere. Since I couldn't process any of the material until i got home, I really had no idea what I was doing. I vastly underestimated just how many photos or how long of a sequence was required to make an enjoyable time lapse. Anyway, this was the longest, and also by far the best subject matter. These are some crazy weather patterns! It's from a span of 4 hours of footage.
Optical time-lapse video from a Raspberry PI
Hostname: xenon
Run Time: 1435961409
Sunrise: 2015-07-03 18:10:09.790707
Sunset: 2015-07-03 22:37:07.000004
delta: 5.00 seconds
Captured Time: 2015-07-03 22:38:49.479451
Youtube: youtu.be/oSLOH63zlII (higher resolution and nicer playback)
These ice cubes took a lot longer to melt than I expected. In total, it took about 3.5 hours. I ended up shooting approximately 2400 still photos - a photo every 5 seconds. I put the photos in sequence using MPEG Streamclip at 15fps, and then doubled the speed of that video once in iMovie. The music is a cover of Modest Mouse's Exit Does Not Exist performed by Sun Kil Moon from their album, Tiny Cities.
The capacitors are covered by the ground plates. Next: the ground plate will be covered with sheets of mylar insulation to isolate them from the "hot plates".
Midsummer sunset at Whitby. A slow-shutter timelapse sequence shot over around 60mins.
Canon 40D & EF-S 10-22mm f/3.5 & ND1000
The winter 2017/ 2018 in the Alps has been fantastic so far - reason enough to make a short visit to the Salzburger Lungau Region in Austria and go skitouring and skiing. Read more about it on hikinginfinland.com
It turns out that my main videos are on my youtube channel, but this one of a timelapse sunset from the AAT dome (using the dome as a trackable tripod) over the Warrumbungles, is probably good enough to put up here too.