Orionid Meteor Shower Last Saturday Morning (HD Timelapse Video) The Orionid Meteor Shower this year was a bit of a dud. I was shooting up at 11,000 feet in the White Mountains and ran my camera for about 4 hours, from 10:40pm Friday until 2:50am, well after the moon came up. To see how a much more active meteor shower looks, here's one of my Perseid Meteor Shower videos from the same location, displayed on the Discover Magazine blog, best viewed full screen: Perseids, Writ Large http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/badastronomy/2009/08/25/perseids-writ-large/ I have a number of posts on my blog www.MyPhotoGuides.com * related to night shooting and timelapse videos. Here's one of the more recent ones building on those pasts posts: Create a Timelapse Video of a Meteor Shower http://activesole.blogspot.com/2011/08/create-timelapse-video-of-meteor-shower.html I'm curious to see how an HD 720P video gets displayed on G+. I have a ton of timelapse footage that I haven't foun...
This is incredible!
ReplyDeleteAmazing!
ReplyDeleteGorgeous color and light!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful shot Jeffrey!
ReplyDeleteThanks! Scott Thomas, This was taken deep in a slot canyon in Utah. It's a 10 second shot, lit only by a slice of blue sky straight up. The white balance was left cool, preserving the cool lighting. White balance seems to be set somewhere after our visual system... we do see what's actually there, we just perceive colors which aren't there... setting the lightest shade to white (and shifting everything else in the scene. The most amazing part of the process is, if you know when and where to look for the blue light, you can often actually overcome your mind's tendency to color what you see, and actually notice the blue! It's not so much changing your perception, just noticing what's actually there. I used to think that outdoor light was white, until I started taking photographs of skiers. In the shade under clear blue skies, the snow also clearly reveals this very blue tone. So do you produce an image which shows the light that's actually there, or do you manipulate it to show the "corrected" colors as someone would most likely perceive? That's your call... there's no "right" approach.
ReplyDeleteI like the blues!
ReplyDeleteperfectly composed!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful! thought it was water first...
ReplyDeleteMathias Samuelsson It is a 15 foot waterfall, spreading into a thin sheet of translucent water.
ReplyDeleteYes Xiaoyuan Su it is very real, although I have returned 2 times since this visit, and neither the waterfall nor the lighting were similar to this. Here are photos from my 3 visits: http://www.flickr.com/search/?q=zion+waterfall&w=23183960%40N00&ss=2&s=int
Scott Thomas I've gone through a similar process... first thought the blue after sunset needed "correction", then learned about the Blue Hour and started to notice the blue as it was happening.
wow, This is a wonderful shot thanks for sharing the "how it was done" narrative
ReplyDeletenice!
ReplyDeletewonderful shot, the colors are awesome!
ReplyDeletesuperfoto....
ReplyDeletePerfect photo and amazing nature.
ReplyDeleteBEAUTIFUL
ReplyDeleteT C B
Beautiful shot, +Jeff Sullivan.
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