View allAll Photos Tagged magiclantern

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Les Baux de Provence,

Logis de Brisson-Peyre, 1571

 

Canon 5d Mark 2

Canon 24 mm

Magic Lantern Dual ISO 50/400

 

No Photoshop, only edited with lightroom.

Took some 60+ shots to get this. No motion detection equipment, had to stick to the classic trial and error.

 

All this nonsense possible using:

Camera: 5D Mark II, powered by the Magic Lantern firmware, and triggered using an Opteka wireless remote.

Flash: The cheap Simpex 777, remotely fired using Cactus triggers.

Software: Over-processes (coz I do that sometime) using LR3.

Canal de l'EDF

 

Canon 5d mark 2

Canon 24mm

Magic lantern dual-iso 50-400 iso

Playing with the HDR setup in Magic Lantern firmware.

Website : lvalenciaphoto.wordpress.com/

 

Canon 5d mark 2

Canon 24-105mm

Panorama - 3 takes

Magic lantern Dualiso

 

Tous droits réservés © L. VALENCIA

Merci de ne pas utiliser cette photo sans mon autorisation

Website : lvalenciaphoto.wordpress.com/

 

Canon 5d mark 2

Canon 24-105mm

Magic Lantern dual-iso 100-800

Panorama en 3 photos

 

Tous droits réservés © L. VALENCIA

Merci de ne pas utiliser cette photo sans mon autorisation.

This is a boldly illustrated glass slide featuring three traditional lifeboat men at work.

The slide is from some time between the late 19th century and early 20th century. It would have been viewed using a magic lantern, an early type of image projector.

 

This image is part of the Tyne & Wear archives & museums set Our Life-Boat Men.

 

(Copyright) We're happy for you to share this digital image within the spirit of The Commons. Please cite 'Tyne & Wear Archives & Museums' when reusing. Certain restrictions on high quality reproductions and commercial use of the original physical version apply though; if you're unsure please email adam.bell@twmuseums.org.uk

Website : lvalenciaphoto.wordpress.com/

Les Sept Portes de Jérusalem (David Soussana)

Plage du Prado / Marseille

 

Canon 5d mark 2

Canon 24-105mm

Magic lantern Dualiso

 

Tous droits réservés © L. VALENCIA

Merci de ne pas utiliser cette photo sans mon autorisation

This is a boldly illustrated glass slide featuring a traditional lifeboat and its crew braving the water and aiding the crew of a sinking ship to safety.

The slide is from some time between the late 19th century and early 20th century. It would have been viewed using a Magic Lantern, an early type of image projector.

 

This image is part of the Tyne & Wear archives & museums set Our Life-Boat Men.

  

(Copyright) We're happy for you to share this digital image within the spirit of The Commons. Please cite 'Tyne & Wear Archives & Museums' when reusing. Certain restrictions on high quality reproductions and commercial use of the original physical version apply though; if you're unsure please email adam.bell@twmuseums.org.uk

5D Mark 2

Samyang 14mm

HDR in 9 takes +1 / -1 with magic lantern

View the movie here: vimeo.com/30875126

 

Note: If you want to watch the movie in 1280x720 on Vimeo, make sure to turn the scaling off when you enlarge it.

 

The spider web construction took almost exactly an hour and a half. The camera took a photo every 5 seconds. There are about 1,050 frames in the video and the movie was created using a frame rate of 10 frames per second.

 

The photographs used in the time lapse were taken with a Canon T2i dSLR enhanced with the Magic Lantern firmware hack, which provided the camera with the intervalometer needed to automatically take a photo every n seconds.

 

© All rights reserved

Dates: ca. 1900

Maker: T.H. McAllistar

Place: USA: New York

Donor: Gift of the Estate of Gerard Dallas Jencks

Photographer Credit: Scottish Rite Masonic Museum & Library

 

90.5.164

 

For more information on Magic Lanterns, check out our blog!

Rokinon 8mm

30 minutos de exposicion, tomadas con MagicLantern.

Canon 5D Mark II

Canon EF 35mm f/1.4 L

Didymium filter

 

120s at f/8

This illustration from page 52 of "The Peep Show" shows that the meaning of the term is not the usual box that contains images and objects that are viewed though a lens but instead it refers to the magic lantern, a projector for glass slides. It shows a porter for an itinerant lanternist with the instrument and box of slides on his back. There were also itinerant showmen with peep show boxes who traveled in the same way.

city hall - redwood city, california

Website : lvalenciaphoto.wordpress.com/

 

Canon 5d mark 2

Samyang 14mm

Magic lantern Dualiso

 

Tous droits réservés © L. VALENCIA

Merci de ne pas utiliser cette photo sans mon autorisation

Website : lvalenciaphoto.wordpress.com/

500px : 500px.com/laurentvalencia

 

L'oeuvre de Baptiste Debombourg

 

Canon 5d mark 2

Tokina 16-28mm

Magic lantern Dualiso

 

Tous droits réservés © L. VALENCIA

Merci de ne pas utiliser cette photo sans mon autorisation

Website : lvalenciaphoto.wordpress.com/

500px : 500px.com/laurentvalencia

 

Canon 5d mark 2

Canon 24-105mm

Magic lantern Dualiso

 

Tous droits réservés © L. VALENCIA

Merci de ne pas utiliser cette photo sans mon autorisation

Missed the burning red moment of this evenings sunset but did manage to take a very tranquil panorama of docklands.

 

shot using my standard formula; 3 x panels (comprised of 9 bracketed images enfused to form each), so 27 images in total. Shot with 5d2 (running magiclantern) & TSE 17mm f/4 lens on a cheap $10 mini tripod.

Comets Showers in Skardu

 

Saw few amazing star trails of David Kingham and Weerapong Chaipuck and i had my old star trails raw pictures ... it is a merge of 60 x pictures each 30 sec exposure shot at ISO 3200 in Skardu. The lights in the foreground are of Shangrilla Resort in Skardu with some portion of Kachura Lake also visible.

The technique involved, i searched for it for a very long time but couldnt get a decent enough description ... what i ended up doing is reducing opacity of each picture and merged them all ... thanks to CS6 "Actions" ...

    

Canon EOS 60D | Canon 10-22mm f3.5-5.6 | 10mm | f3.5 | ISO 3200 | Exposure 60x30sec

 

Website : lvalenciaphoto.wordpress.com/

500px : 500px.com/laurentvalencia

 

Pont Raymond Barre / Lyon

 

Canon 5d mark 2

Tokina 16-28mm

Magic lantern Dualiso

 

Tous droits réservés © L. VALENCIA

Merci de ne pas utiliser cette photo sans mon autorisation

Utilisation de la fonction dual iso de magic lantern

Looks can be deceiving ... as far as the weather is concerned! While it seems calm in this photo, it was actually blowing close to a gale! The air temperature was hovering close to freezing and the NNW wind was frequently gusting at 30-35 mph; great sturdy #Manfrotto 190More tripod. Sea form was piling up on the windward side of the jetty and it would occasionally blow over on the protected side where I was hunkered down. This photo gives the appearance as if Neptune waved his Triton over the troubled waters and they became calm.

 

This is a compilation of 131 frames using Bulb Ramping and taken at 10 sec intervals using #MagicLantern. That equates to a 22-minute exposure when it was averaged in a #StarStaX.

Video of the timelapse is on YouTube:

youtu.be/_FMS1kDfipU

shot using Lensbaby Composer Pro with Edge 80 Optic www.lensbaby.com/

   

© Nuno Caldeira

         

For licensing and inquiries ✉ hello@iamnunocaldeira.com www.iamnunocaldeira.com

One meteor can be seen in this image in the left hand side.

 

The Lyrids (LYR) are a meteor shower lasting from April 16 to April 26 each year. The radiant of the meteor shower is located in the constellation Lyra, near this constellation's brightest star, Alpha Lyrae (proper name Vega); hence they are also called the Alpha Lyrids and sometimes the April Lyrids. Their peak is typically around April 22 each year. The source of the meteor shower is particles of dust shed in the cometary tail generated by the periodic Comet C/1861 G1 Thatcher. The Lyrids have been observed for the past 2600 years.

 

The image was captured with a canon T2i and a Tokina 11-16mm lense. F2.8 ISO 100 with a exposure of 45 seconds. A total of 245 frames.

This is my magic lantern. It once belonged to my great grandfather.

32x INDIVIDUAL 30 SECOND EXPOSURES,

all stacked with STARTRAILS.EXE.

Shot with 5dii and old manual focus Yashica 28mm lens.

with a touch of light painting in the foreground.

Website : lvalenciaphoto.wordpress.com/

 

Canon 5d mark 2

Canon 24-105mm

Magic lantern dualiso 100-800 iso

 

Tous droits réservés © L. VALENCIA

Merci de ne pas utiliser cette photo sans mon autorisation

Magic Lantern slide 1850s/1860s.

Dans l'optique d'une future vidéo, voici un petit test de la fonction "Override FPS" de Magic Lantern sur Canon 5D Mark II, réglée sur 4fps.

Ce mode est particulièrement utile en basse lumière puisqu'il utilise un temps d'exposition de 1/4 de seconde par image (shutter speed 1/4), ce qui permet de diminuer la sensibilité ISO du capteur, et de fermer un peu plus le diaphragme pour une PDC (Profondeur De Champ) plus grande. A 4fps on gagne environ l'équivalent de 3 stops par rapport au mode vidéo natif du 5D (limité à un shutter de 1/30e sec).

Ce mode est donc plutôt dédié au timelapse, de par sa faible cadence d'image. Il est tout de même réglable, de 4 à 25fps (les valeurs supérieures - jusqu'à 35fps - ne sont pas encore fonctionnelles).

 

Tourné avec le PictureStyle CineStyle de Technicolor, monté et étalonné avec Final Cut X (la vitesse des rushes a été multipliée par 2 en montage).

 

N'hésitez pas à commenter et à poser des questions, j'y répondrai si je le peux.

 

PS : le "dé-zoom" et le pano sont faits à la main, donc pas très fluides, c'est juste un test rapide ^^

Website : lvalenciaphoto.wordpress.com/

 

Canon 5d Mark 2

Canon 24-105mm

Magic lantern dualiso 50-800 iso

 

another neat trick from the magic lantern firmware replacement.

 

focus stacking.

 

I couldn't get this to work at first, but it turns out that you have to have the camera in live view before the feature will activate. I never would have persevered, but one of my flickr contacts got it to work, so I knew it must be possible. it's always easier to figure out something you know is possible.

 

this is about 42 exposures processed through Helicon Focus. it's a pretty nice program that comes with a 30 full feature trial. I think it's about $50 to buy, and I'd think about it.

 

I used a 100mm f2.8 canon macro lens and focused it in front of the coin and then stepped through the focus range until just past the coin. not sure if it's a feature or a side effect, but helicon seems to have picked out the subject and left some blur on the background, including a 'frame' of sorts around the whole image (which I cropped out)(but you can still see some of the blur behind the coin).

A stunning photo I captured last night of the thin 17% waxing crescent Moon at Frosty Drew Observatory in Charlestown, Rhode Island, USA.

 

Photo Details:

Camera: Canon 60D MagicLantern

4000mm

f/10

ISO: 1250

Exposure: 1/200 second

Process: This photo is a panoramic stitch of 6 photos.

 

-Scott MacNeill

exitpupil.org

frostydrew.org

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