RSS
 

Posts Tagged ‘Timelapse’

Timelapse Northern Lights And Startrails 720p HD

30 Nov

All video footage is copyrighted to me. A storm on the surface of the sun known as a “coronal mass ejection” pushed billions of tons of superheated gas into the solar system, which is now appearing over some parts of the northern hemisphere in the form of aurora borealis. The Telegraph reports: “Dramatic auroras were seen in Denmark, Norway, Greenland, Germany and across the northern United States and Canada” Tuesday night. Watch in HD! 2900+ still images taken with Nikon D40 through a Sigma 10-20mm f4 lens and nikon 35mm f1.8. I used Camera control pro for some clips, but most of them were taken only using the Nikon ML-L3 remote since D40 doesn’t have a built in intervalometer. One clip is taken in Bergen, Norway, the remaining clips are taken in Levanger, Norway. Some aircraft navigation lights and even a few meteors are captured in this timelapse. The star trails effect was created using photoshop and a star trails action which can be found here: timelapseblog.com and downloaded from here: www.mediafire.com Thanks to Owen Scharlotte! Camera: Nikon D40. The soundtrack is Mika: Fall to pieces -Silence, it can be found here: ccmixter.org
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Taking stock of the gear used on a trip is important to help you better pack and plan in future. Today I go through and honestly evaluate what I took, how useful it was, and how often I used each piece of gear. I love going to Cheung Chau – it is a tradition of mine. A few days of relaxation, good food and photography. Check out the map here: g.co Join our new Flickr forum: www.flickr.com www.facebook.com www.mattgranger.com https
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 
Comments Off on Timelapse Northern Lights And Startrails 720p HD

Posted in Nikon Videos

 

Budapest Timelapse 2012

29 Nov

www.peterdancso.com http Blog: dancsopeter.blogspot.hu Budapest Timelapse 2011: www.youtube.com Budapest Timelapse 2010: www.youtube.com All rights reserved. Usage of visual material without permission is forbidden. For licensing contact me via the given websites. Camera: Canon EOS 550D / T2i Lenses: Tokina 11-16mm 2.8, Sigma 30mm 1.4, Samyang 85mm 1.4
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 
Comments Off on Budapest Timelapse 2012

Posted in Photography Videos

 

Capturing the Northern Lights in Timelapse Video

29 Nov

A guest post by Phil Hart – author of the Shooting Stars eBook (use code DPSTARS for a 25% discount).

In this post, I’d like to share the back story to a new video I have released after a nine week ‘extreme astronomy’ adventure in the Yukon earlier this year, where I went to capture timelapse footage of the Northern Lights (the ‘Aurora Borealis’).

First the video, ‘Valentine’s Aurora’, which I hope you will enjoy with the lights down and the music up:

Valentine’s Aurora from Phil Hart on Vimeo.

The Location

All of the footage for this video (except the fisheye sequences) was shot on Annie Lake Road, south of Whitehorse the capital of Canada’s Yukon Territory. See this Map Link.

It was the 14th February, and only my second night out on location away from home base where I was staying on the shores of Shallow Bay, Lake Laberge, to the north of Whitehorse. The weather was good during the day and I was confident of clear skies, so I made the trek an hour and a half south. There was nothing to indicate that aurora activity was going to storm that night, but that’s the nature of aurora. When you’re this far north you have to get out whenever the weather is good and capture whatever happens. Further south, you might like to monitor the forecasts on spaceweather.com.

I could actually see aurora curtains low in the north even before the end of twilight, so I had an idea I was in for a great night, and had to get moving quickly.

On location at Annie Lake Road: Canon 5D Mark II, 14mm lens, 30 secs, f2.8, ISO800

Camera Gear and Exposure Settings

I used four cameras to capture all the footage in this video:

  1. Canon 5D Mark II with 24mm f1.4 lens
  2. Canon 5D Mark II with 14mm f2.8 lens
  3. Canon 1100D (Rebel T3) with 10-22mm lens
  4. Canon 5D (original) with Peleng 8mm Fisheye lens (running autonomously with an intervalometer back at Shallow Bay)

Fisheye Aurora: Canon 5D, 8mm lens, 30 secs, f3.5, ISO800

All of these lenses were used at their maximum aperture, as to capture the motion of the aurora requires exposures that are as short as possible. In general, exposures were ~6-8 seconds with the fast f1.4 lens and ~15-25 seconds with the slower lenses. But when the aurora was very bright and active, I was using exposures as short as ½ second with the f1.4 lens. In fact, there were actually a few minutes that night where I could record live video of the aurora, but that footage was too grainy to use in this compilation.

Although I was recording long timelapse sequences of images very quickly, I still tried whenever possible to capture full size RAW files. Only when the exposures were short (<1 second) was I forced to shoot straight to JPG as the camera could not keep up otherwise. At the end of the nine weeks, I had nearly three terabtyes of data, which is quite a headache!

Motion Control and Accessories

  • The 5D Mark II and 24mm lens were carried on an alt-azimuth panning mount with a custom controller, to create some of the panning sequences in the video.
  • The 1100D (Rebel T3) with 10-22mm lens was carried on a little Vixen Polarie, used in a horizontal panning mode, which provided for simple panning sequences.
  • The other 5D Mark II with 14mm lens was used on a standard tripod.

These last two cameras were set to continuous shooting mode, and a simple push button remote release was used to fire off the shutter for as long as the button was locked down.

Canon 1100D (Rebel T3), 10-22mm lens @10mm, 25 secs, f3.5, ISO800

Composition

With aurora, like other night sky photography and landscape work in general, it’s the combination of foreground and sky that makes an image. So I spent a lot of time looking for rugged mountains and other attractive foregrounds. But location scouting is quite difficult in the Yukon in the middle of winter, with very few roads open and clear. Despite several more weeks touring around after this, Annie Lake remained one of my favourite locations and it was one of the more accessible as well.

One of the factors to consider when chasing aurora, and one of the advantages of this site, is to look for a low northern horizon to increase visibility when aurora activity is low, but interesting horizons around to the east and west for when activity increases.

Landscape with low northern horizon: Canon 5D Mark II, 14mm lens, 15 secs, f2.8, ISO1600

Unless you resort to light painting, in general the foreground appears silhouetted against the aurora, so you need strong profiles (isolated trees for example, rather than a wall of them). But occasionally the aurora is so bright overhead that it can actually illuminate the scenery. You can see that in the image below. Other times you may have moonlight which creates a very different lighting environment, and turns the sky blue just like the daytime sky.

Bright aurora illuminating the landscape: Canon 5D Mark II, 24mm lens, 5 secs, f1.4, ISO800

Post Processing

I learnt a lot as I began to process these Image sequences back home in Melbourne. To get the most out of them, I used Adobe After Effects to directly import the RAW image sequences. I also used the Neat Video noise smoothing plugin to reduce the appearance of noise without sacrificing too much detail. In some cases I also used Lightroom and LR Timelapse to smoothly vary some development parameters across the sequence, to cope with large variations in brightness of the aurora, before importing the sequence into After Effects. These frequent and often fast changes in brightess of the aurora is one reason why I often shot at lower ISO settings (~ISO800) than I normally would for night sky photography, to prevent clipping of bright areas of the aurora as much as possible.

The Star Trail effect at the end of the video was created using the ‘Lighten’ blending mode in the freeware program StarStax by Markus Enzweiler, which I highly recommend.

I hope you enjoy this Valentine’s Aurora video and a little of the behind the scenes story. Feel free to share it!

Post originally from: Digital Photography Tips.

Check out our more Photography Tips at Photography Tips for Beginners, Portrait Photography Tips and Wedding Photography Tips.

Capturing the Northern Lights in Timelapse Video



Digital Photography School

 
Comments Off on Capturing the Northern Lights in Timelapse Video

Posted in Photography

 

Rose opening timelapse with rotate

26 Nov

Time-lapse rose flower by Neil Bromhall for www.rightplants4me.co.uk my interactive plant identification and pruning guide website. Filmed in studio, x2 Nikon D300 digital camera 105mm & 50mm lens & x2 studio flash with reflector. 3-4 minute intervals between exposures. Filmed over a period of 36hrs
Video Rating: 5 / 5

 
Comments Off on Rose opening timelapse with rotate

Posted in Nikon Videos

 

Photographer creates time-lapse showing D600 ‘dust’ accumulation

22 Nov

Screen_Shot_2012-11-21_at_12.02.24_PM.png

Canadian photographer Kyle Clemens has created a timelapse video which shows the slow accumulation of debris on the sensor of his brand new Nikon D600. When we reviewed the D600 we expressed concern about the propensity of its sensor to gather specks of debris, and Clements raises the troubling possibility that whatever it is that’s ending up on the D600’s sensor could be coming from inside the camera. Click through for the full video and a link to Kyle Clements’ blog where he investigates the issue. 

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
Comments Off on Photographer creates time-lapse showing D600 ‘dust’ accumulation

Posted in Uncategorized

 

Kencho-ji Temple(???,HDR Timelapse)

16 Nov

Nikon/D300,Panasonic/GH1, Lens:SIGMA/8-16mm F4.5-5.6 DC HSM,SAMYANG 8mm F3.5 Fisheye HDR Processing:Photomatix Pro4 Music:Original used GarageBand’11 Location Data: natsuani.blogspot.com
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 
Comments Off on Kencho-ji Temple(???,HDR Timelapse)

Posted in Nikon Videos

 

Monument Valley Timelapse Sunrise HD (2009) USA (3D Youtube)

16 Nov

Cinematography, Edited & Directed by Yo Suzuki / ???( www.lovemushroom.com Love Mushroom Studio). Absolutely no post production color enhancement & correction. Tsé Bii? Ndzisgaii, meaning Valley of the rock in Navajo language. Music: “Sharman’s Dream” by Ah Nee Mah More time lapse movies by Love Mushroom Studio Nature Landscape www.pond5.com Monument Valley www.pond5.com Location: Tsé Bii? Ndzisgai, Monument Valley, Arizona & Utah, Navajo Nation, USA. Date: September, 2009. Love Mushroom Studio, All rights reserved. Monument Valley Time Lapse
Video Rating: 5 / 5

 
Comments Off on Monument Valley Timelapse Sunrise HD (2009) USA (3D Youtube)

Posted in 3D Videos

 

Further Down The River | Zilker Botanical Gardens HD Timelapse Preview

10 Nov

This video is comprised of around 6000 still images taken in June and September of 2010. This stubborn video has been in production since June 2010 and I finally got it all stitched together and looking good. I had a lot of trouble rendering this puppy correctly but I think that I learned enough about the inner workings of the software to counteract my anger about it. Making these time lapses are some of the most enjoyable things we’ve ever done. To sit alone or with your special someone in the garden early in the soft morning light with the company of a still pond and lotus blossoms makes everything feel right in the world. We had this song, Aqueous Transmission, in mind while we planned and captured the time lapse sequences. Just listening to it with your eyes closed makes you feel so peaceful. We wanted to convey that feeling in the video and create a tribute to one of our favourite songs. So as for the video: My computer at home sucks so bad that I wasn’t able to fully preview it. I’m not that happy with the quality in this version but meh, when I finish the whole thing it will be better. 🙂 If anyone has any tips for using Adobe Media Enocoder, I’d be delighted to get some tips.

 
Comments Off on Further Down The River | Zilker Botanical Gardens HD Timelapse Preview

Posted in Nikon Videos

 

Earth. View from Space. Time-Lapse video.

08 Nov

Time lapse sequences of photographs taken with a special low-light 4K-camera by the crew of expedition 28 & 29 onboard the International Space Station from August to October, 2011. Image Courtesy of the Image Science & Analysis Laboratory, NASA Johnson Space Center, The Gateway to Astronaut Photography of Earth eol.jsc.nasa.gov Edited by Michael König & Shaida Khidirov Music: Space Trance by 89Ford
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 
Comments Off on Earth. View from Space. Time-Lapse video.

Posted in Photography Videos

 

DEUS EX HOMINE – San Francisco 3D Moco Time-lapse by Golden Gate 3D (GG3D)

06 Nov

To view properly in 3D, hover over the 3D button in the bottom right corner of the video and select “Change Viewing Method…” Pick from several anaglyph (colored glasses) and stereo modes. Side-by-side works well for 3DTV’s. If your 3DTV doesn’t automatically detect the side-by-side input, go into the 3D menu and manually select it. HTML5 stereo view requires NVIDIA 3D Vision. NVIDIA has chosen “Deus Ex Homine” as “Best 3D Video of 2011 www.3dvisionlive.com If you have NVIDIA 3D Vision, you can also view at NVIDIA’s 3D Vision Live, which offers a higher quality stream than YouTube: www.3dvisionlive.com The full 2D 1920 x 1080p version and behind-the-scenes photos are available on Vimeo: vimeo.com “Deus Ex Homine” comes from Latin meaning “god built by humans.” That “god” might be the tools – our machines and technologies, the city – our caves of concrete and steel, and the networks – the highways and waterways that are the lifeblood of our cities. With our technology, we conquered and reshaped the natural world. As we have overrun our planet’s surface, more and more of us live in the fantastically complex artificial biomes that are our cities. Modern societies and economies depend on these constructs. Bridges and servers connect us, cars and planes move us, farms and restaurants feed us, and cargo ships and oil tankers make it all possible. The “Makers” among us forge machines – electromechanical gods – that reshape and govern humanity. Automobiles. Typewriters
Video Rating: 4 / 5

 
Comments Off on DEUS EX HOMINE – San Francisco 3D Moco Time-lapse by Golden Gate 3D (GG3D)

Posted in 3D Videos