View allAll Photos Tagged intervalometer
Photo Tools Used
iPhone 4
The iPhone 4 camera is a huge improvement on the previous iPhone 3GS. The iPhone 4 camera specs are:
5.0 Mpixels (2592 x 1936)
1/3.2" back-illuminated CMOS sensor
4:3 aspect ratio
35 mm film camera crop factor: 7.64
Low ISO 80 (or better)
3.85 mm lens focal length
f/2.8 lens aperture
Autofocus: tap to focus
With the camera improvement and screen improvement, iPhone 4 photos just seem to pop. Amazing clarity.
iPhone 4 camera apps used in my photos
Camera+ iPhone App by tap tap tap
Related links
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This years fireworks display and as with last year; watched them with HJ and let the intervalometer do the work :o)
Can you pick a favourite?!
15 fisheye lens; this represents 40 min of real time; 30 sec exposures using a Canon intervalometer; stitched together into a movie using Quicktime; really easy once you've done it a few times.
This was taken out my window yesterday evening with my Canon PowerShot A610. This is roughly 120 minutes of stills compressed down to 20 seconds. I used the CHDK "Intervalometer" script to trigger the shutter.
Watch this video on Vimeo. Video created by David Hilowitz.
This years fireworks display and as with last year; watched them with HJ and let the intervalometer do the work :o)
Can you pick a favourite?!
This years fireworks display and as with last year; watched them with HJ and let the intervalometer do the work :o)
Can you pick a favourite?!
I made this one from my stay on Chicago of fall 2011. I Used a Canon 450D XSi, a tripod an a Intervalometer nearly around 800 frames. Added music with Sony Vega Studio.
Yea, we didn't get tired of taking group photos. That's what intervalometers for dSLRs are for, right?
5 photos in total, each taken 3 seconds apart.
in relative darkness with no light from behind.
Part of a timelapse still in the works.
Using this script.
chdk.wikia.com/wiki/UBASIC/Scripts:Long_Exposure_Interval...
Extra light provided by the front porch lighting from behind.
Part of a timelapse still in the works.
Using this script.
chdk.wikia.com/wiki/UBASIC/Scripts:Long_Exposure_Interval...
Shot using Canon A700 with CHDK intervalometer script. Frames every 5 seconds. FFMPEG to create video from 1098 frames shot at 640 x 480.
This years fireworks display and as with last year; watched them with HJ and let the intervalometer do the work :o)
Can you pick a favourite?!
eos 550d with magic lantern installed.
.Selective iso in small increments up to iso 25600, which is very useful.
It also has a time lapse thing.
You just set the camera on a tri[pod to manual mode turn the intervalometer on., make sure you get the smallest photo file size you can and off you go. It just keeps clicking away.
I shoot lots of videos hence the battery grip.
the iso here is set to 1250.
Watch this video on Vimeo.
1min 6secs. Mountains and clouds shot in HDR time lapse.
Music by Sarah McLachlan - "Last Dance" itunes.apple.com/us/album/surfacing/id278578663
5D Mark II
Tokina 80-400mm
TC-80N3 Intervalometer
HDR processing done in Photomatix
I'm so so so chuffed with it, it really works, no fuss and for less than £15.
Follow me on twitter to keep up with all the other stuff I do.
This years fireworks display and as with last year; watched them with HJ and let the intervalometer do the work :o)
Can you pick a favourite?!
This years fireworks display and as with last year; watched them with HJ and let the intervalometer do the work :o)
Can you pick a favourite?!
Images captured by a camera lifted by a kite. The camera is a Canon S90 running the Ultra Intervalometer CHDK script. The kite is a Dopero. Nathan Craig flew the kite and Margaret Brown Vega pointed the camera
Bend the legs together so that each short leg touches a long leg. Use the side cutters to cut each leg short, just past the point where they touch. Use solder to cement the connection.
Image credit: Daniel Schmidt, ABC Open Producer
Time-Lapse of us planting the garden yesterday evening (4/30/08).
...I had it encoded for 16:9 anamorphic but apparently that didn't translate when I uploaded it to Flickr, thus the squeezed look.
Just experimenting with long exposures, unfortunately I do not have the luxury of owning intervalometer's and shutter releases so I improvised.
Glue together the two flat faces of the LEDs with your favourite brand of instant glue.
Image credit: Daniel Schmidt, ABC Open Producer
Trying out a timelapse with my new generic brand intervalometer. Too bad the video ended right when the sky started to get interesting.
This guy had some seriously awesome gear I was seriously jealous of. Namely, his Canon 5D Mark II (I have the 5D) that he had attached to a portable dolly of sorts to with which to make presumably totally sweet videos, a Canon 16-35mm L-Series f/2.8 lens, a Nikon 3000 with a battery pack allowing him to shoot several bazillion frames rapidly, and an intervalometer he generously offered to me to use earlier in the evening (with dubious success). An intervalometer is a nifty device that you can program to make your camera fire every "x" seconds to make time lapse series and the like.
Time-lapse photography of the night sky in Rhode Island. Testing out my new Phottix intervalometer for the D90!
I made a time lapse video by taking 1,833 frames over 2 hours using a shutter release bulb w/ timer (intervalometer).
For the video and more details check out this link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0o1h5pXYIhg
night to dawn, 2am to 7am. 1800 frames taken at 10 second intervals on my Cannon PowerShot S90 using the CHDK intervalometer.
Although surprising, this is the orientation of the Canon remote cables as well. It appears that the Arca-Swiss style L quick-release plates also take this into account -- so it isn't as much of a challenge as I feared.
Yea, we didn't get tired of taking group photos. That's what intervalometers for dSLRs are for, right?
5 photos in total, each taken 3 seconds apart.
I had a Panasonic FZ-200 at 24x optical zoom set to f8 @ 125 during partial phases, and set to auto, with extreme underexposure compensation, during totality. The totality shots were a bit overexposed, but I was more interested in watching than spending time tweaking the camera.
An intervalometer triggered the camera at 15-s intervals throughout the eclipse and I bracketed the shots +/- 1 stop. As the Earth rotated I had to adjust the camera angle to track the sun, but that was only every 10 minutes or so. I also had an old Nikon 995 set up for shooting the surroundings. Tom was shooting with a Canon with a bigger lens than I had, but I've not seen his photos yet.