View Full Version here: : My first time lapse
lacad01
11-02-2010, 08:17 PM
So after reading up on and viewing as many time lapse videos as I could I thought I'd take a crack. Rule #1, make sure you check that the camera battery is fully charged :sad:
Oh well, here's a quick 9 second clip showing cloud movement while snapping at the Milky Way and then a quick moon rise which is what I was hoping to capture in all its glory but alas, that wasn't to be :(
Each image was a 15 second exposure with a 3 second delay between each shot taken with a Canon 20D & Sigma 10-20 @ 20mm.
I then used Apple iMovie to create and export the clip. Quite a useful learning curve nevertheless :)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Li2qa0NQfE
TheDecepticon
11-02-2010, 08:36 PM
Pretty good really.:) It's a shame your battery became discharged!!:sadeyes:
telecasterguru
11-02-2010, 09:30 PM
The time lapse looks really good. Very ethereal.
Frank
rastis95
11-02-2010, 09:44 PM
Great work Adam, looks good. The moon rise would have been a craker. Keep at it
lacad01
11-02-2010, 10:14 PM
Thanks for viewing guys, hoping for some clear skies soon so I can have another crack at it :)
iceman
12-02-2010, 04:52 AM
Nice work Adam, it's fun doing that sort of stuff.
lacad01
12-02-2010, 08:44 AM
Cheers Mike, yes fun but time consuming :)
bloodhound31
12-02-2010, 10:15 AM
They are a challenge aren't they Adam? My biggest beef with time-lapse is the noise levels. When you take over 800 shots on a good night, it is depressing and energy draining to go and subtract darks from every single one of them....
I love the cloud effect.
Nice work Adam
lacad01
12-02-2010, 10:28 AM
Thanks Ric, the only time I like clouds at night :)
Baz, I was surprised to see so many hot pixels when looking at each frame. I was shooting at ISO400 and didn't think a 15sec exposure would be that bad but perhaps was combination of a number of things, wonder if turning on Internal Noise Reduction would have helped but then the duration between frames becomes as long as the individual exposure itself.
Anyhow, am planning something bigger and better for the next one with a bit of music thrown in as well :)
Benny L
14-02-2010, 07:21 PM
thats a good effort mate :) to me, its a little bit jerky though. What frame rate were you working at? I do my timelapses through quicktime and work at 24fps and always have smooth results ;)
Ben
lacad01
14-02-2010, 10:04 PM
Thanks Ben, know what you mean about the jerkiness. Not sure what frame rate as I used iMovie to string all the shots together then set the interframe duration to something like 0.3 seconds or something like that. I think my next effort will be with Quicktime pro as it looks a lot easier
Well Done Adam i would love to give this a go myself one day :thumbsup:
Thanks for the tip (jen writes in black book to make sure battery is fully charged) before trying this :lol:
Benny L
14-02-2010, 11:57 PM
Yep thats what i'm using all you need to do is import the images and it will ask you what frame rate to play back as, just choose 24fps and its smooth sailing from there ;)
jjjnettie
15-02-2010, 12:35 AM
Nice work.
They're good fun to make.
I did one the other night of my spathphillium, reviving after a drink of water. Amazing stuff. Watching the leaves go from drooping to fully upright in just 8 or 9 frames.
lacad01
15-02-2010, 09:13 AM
That'll be great to see Nettie, I've seen a few examples on YouTube and they're amazing
Thanks Jen, also make sure the memory card has lots of free capacity as you end up taking literally hundreds of shots :) (that is if the battery is fully charged :P)
:thumbsup: Jen takes more notes :thanx:
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