OTHER THINGS IN THE WORLD THAN MUSIC > Art and Literature, Movies and TV
Moving eye-candy
Altus:
Dave,
Nice work on your timelapse experiment. There's something so fascinating to see how it reveals details in the world around you that generally go unnoticed.
My first attempt at timelapse was back in 1999. I set up a video camera, shot an hour of footage, and sped it up 1000-3000% depending on the content.
More recently, I've shot some timelapse with my canon dslr hooked up to a laptop for remote control. Is that how you shot yours?
Dave Michuda:
Mike,
I use a Nikon DSLR, a D5000. It has a setting that allows up to 999 pix taken a varying intervals. So, for many of the cloud pix it was taking one pic every 3 minutes. Some intervals were longer some shorter. Then I just bring it into editing software & stitch them together. Pretty easy actually. Not I just have to get off my butt & shoot more scenes.
Altus:
--- Quote from: Dave Michuda on October 21, 2011, 05:44:19 PM ---Not I just have to get off my butt & shoot more scenes.
--- End quote ---
I hear you on that. I have the same problem. ;D
DeepR:
Nice.
I would love to compile the soundtrack for such movies.
Dave Michuda:
I saw a post at Wired about a new time lapse video from the International Space Station and I realized how much I love those types of videos. So I compiled some of the best ISS vid and put it to music.
NASA Space Station Time Lapse Collection
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