Here is another time lapse composed of 3 clips shot in Copenhagen.
The clips were shot from our living room roof top window and from the alley in Assistensens Grave yard next door (where H.C. Andersen is burried). The last clip is made during the sunset hour at the city lakes.
The video is composed of a few thousand pictures put together, showing 25 frames per second.
Check out the tutorial here to see how it was done.
Equipment used: Canon 7D with Sigma 10-22mm lens + 16x ND filter,
Hanel Giga T Pro II set to trigger with 1-10 sek intervals (depending on how fast the clouds move), Shutter speed: 1/20 - 1/50 sek at F/22 or F/8,
Software: Frames assembled in Quicktime Pro. Video editing in Adobe Premiere Pro CS6
Showing posts with label Time Lapse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Time Lapse. Show all posts
Tuesday, 12 March 2013
Thursday, 14 February 2013
Pizza time lapse
Here´s how you cook a pizza in 36 seconds:
The time lapse was made by taking one pictures every 10 second while making the pizza. After taking 950 pictures, all the frames were put together to a short movie, playing 25 pictures pr. second
Equipment used:
Canon 7d on tripod, Tamron 17-50mm lens, 1/50 sek at F/8,0
Hanel Giga T Pro II set to trigger with 10 sek intervals,
Patience...it takes around 950 shots..
Software: Quicktime Pro
Here is how to do it (not the pizza):
1) Set up your camera on a tripod and set it in manual mode (its probably OK in auto if your not used to manual).
2) Get your exposure right exactly the same way as if you´d take a normal picture.
3) Set your trigger to fire with whatever time-intervals you wish (keep in mind that you need 24-30 shots for each second of movie).
4) Go ahead and do your cooking tricks...or whatever your´e doing :)
5) Open Quicktime Pro on your computer. Go to File, Open Image Sequence and locate your files. Select the first photo in your sequence, choose your frames pr second rate (I chose 25) and hit Open. Quicktime will assemble your files into one large movie.
6) You can now export it as a smaller format if you want.
The time lapse was made by taking one pictures every 10 second while making the pizza. After taking 950 pictures, all the frames were put together to a short movie, playing 25 pictures pr. second
Equipment used:
Canon 7d on tripod, Tamron 17-50mm lens, 1/50 sek at F/8,0
Hanel Giga T Pro II set to trigger with 10 sek intervals,
Patience...it takes around 950 shots..
Software: Quicktime Pro
Here is how to do it (not the pizza):
1) Set up your camera on a tripod and set it in manual mode (its probably OK in auto if your not used to manual).
2) Get your exposure right exactly the same way as if you´d take a normal picture.
3) Set your trigger to fire with whatever time-intervals you wish (keep in mind that you need 24-30 shots for each second of movie).
4) Go ahead and do your cooking tricks...or whatever your´e doing :)
5) Open Quicktime Pro on your computer. Go to File, Open Image Sequence and locate your files. Select the first photo in your sequence, choose your frames pr second rate (I chose 25) and hit Open. Quicktime will assemble your files into one large movie.
6) You can now export it as a smaller format if you want.
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