For Long Exposure Thursday I'm going to offer a few hundred long exposures, all strung together into a timelapse...
For Long Exposure Thursday I'm going to offer a few hundred long exposures, all strung together into a timelapse video of the earth's rotation under the Milky Way!
http://vimeo.com/24802819
Once you can shoot one long exposure of the Milky Way, you can shoot dozens in a row, then run those images through software which will use them as frames in a video. The Orionid meteor Shower is available for most of the month of October, so head on out with an intervalometer (interval timer), and shoot a few hundred frames so you can catch come meteors! The best time to catch meteors is after midnight when your rotate around to the leading side of the earth as it flies through space at 67,062 miles per hour (107,300 km/h) around the sun.
Create a Timelapse Video of a Meteor Shower
http://activesole.blogspot.com/2011/08/create-timelapse-video-of-meteor-shower.html
#LongExposureThursday #PlusPhotoExtract
http://www.vimeo.com/24802819
http://vimeo.com/24802819
Once you can shoot one long exposure of the Milky Way, you can shoot dozens in a row, then run those images through software which will use them as frames in a video. The Orionid meteor Shower is available for most of the month of October, so head on out with an intervalometer (interval timer), and shoot a few hundred frames so you can catch come meteors! The best time to catch meteors is after midnight when your rotate around to the leading side of the earth as it flies through space at 67,062 miles per hour (107,300 km/h) around the sun.
Create a Timelapse Video of a Meteor Shower
http://activesole.blogspot.com/2011/08/create-timelapse-video-of-meteor-shower.html
#LongExposureThursday #PlusPhotoExtract
http://www.vimeo.com/24802819
nice...
ReplyDeleteVery Cool!
ReplyDeleteJeffrey Sullivan nice video.... how did you make it???
ReplyDeleteWonderful my friend!
ReplyDeletenice timelapse :)
ReplyDeleteSo awesome!
ReplyDeleteThank you!
ReplyDeleteDr. Ravi Gulati Take a couple of hundred shots, adjustment and spot removal in Lightroom and save JPGs, read those into VirtualDub (free), save .AVI video, done! (Then optional conversion to smaller MPEG4 in MPEG Streamclip). A more detailed description is on my blog:
Create a Timelapse Video on your Digital Camera
http://activesole.blogspot.com/2010/11/create-timelapse-video-on-your-digital.html
Jeffrey Sullivan thank you so much for the information....
ReplyDeletewonderful work, thanks for sharing the info!
ReplyDeleteWow, I love this! So gorgeous!
ReplyDeletesuperb! i simply love this stuff!
ReplyDeleteThats awesome......would love to do something like that one day...
ReplyDeleteDarren White Do it today! My timer wasn't working one night, so I triggered several hundred exposures by hand to do this timelapse: http://vimeo.com/18437624 When the previous shot appeared on the display, I triggered the next shot.
ReplyDeleteFascinating time lapse.
ReplyDeleteow many batteries are you going threw per night and with what camera? - id be using a 550d
ReplyDeleteAlso - noise reduction? most star shots i take are at iso3200 for 30 sec and get epic amounts of noise......