Pages tagged time_lapse:

An Introduction to Time-Lapse Photography
http://digital-photography-school.com/an-introduction-to-time-lapse-photography
Night Run II, 1st Half on Flickr - Photo Sharing!
http://www.flickr.com/photos/72511036@N00/3500258467

Great still photography compiled to make a video (stop motion, i guess) of a boats journey through the Houston waterways. (PART 1 of 2)
The two halves were assembled in Quicktime from 2000 still images taken by using a Nikon D700 in the "interval timer" mode. The camera was fastened to an outside rail and set to take a photo every six seconds. Quicktime then assembled the photos into a .mov file that plays back at 12 frames per second. So, one minute of movie time represents 72 minutes of trip time on the channel.
Broken into two halves to meet Flickr's arbitrary 90 second time limit. The two halves were assembled in Quicktime from 2000 still images taken by using a Nikon D700 in the "interval timer" mode. The camera was fastened to an outside rail and set to take a photo every six seconds. Quicktime then assembled the photos into a .mov file that plays back at 12 frames per second. So, one minute of movie time represents 72 minutes of trip time on the channel. The first half begins just below the Port of Houston Authority Turning Basin (the very end of the channel) and continues down to Green's Bayou. The second half takes us from there to Morgan's Point at the head of Galveston Bay. From there we still have 31.5 miles of channel across the bay to the pilot station outside the Galveston jetties.
The two halves were assembled in Quicktime from 2000 still images taken by using a Nikon D700 in the "interval timer" mode. The camera was fastened to an outside rail and set to take a photo every six seconds. Quicktime then assembled the photos into a .mov file that plays back at 12 frames per second. So, one minute of movie time represents 72 minutes of trip time on the channel. The first half begins just below the Port of Houston Authority Turning Basin (the very end of the channel) and continues down to Green's Bayou. The second half takes us from there to Morgan's Point at the head of Galveston Bay. From there we still have 31.5 miles of channel across the bay to the pilot station outside the Galveston jetties.
Peter Belanger | Blog | cover creation
http://peterbelanger.com/posts/36-cover-creation
An awesome time lapse video of how a Mac world cover is created. From photo to composite to photoshop cover creation to indesign flow. Awesome!!
zajebano
Peter Belanger Photography, Commercial photo studio based in San Francisco, California specializing in advertising, editorial photography.