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Schlagwort: Time-Lapse

Gotham City San Francisco // A Timelapse Film

Ein etwas anderes Timelapse Video von Toby Harriman, der San Francisco dafür in schwarz-weiß zeitraffert. Die Musik ist ganz schön „puh“, muss aber wohl auf diesen Bildern so sein.

This idea came from the aether; it emerged over time. Several years ago (2012) while exploring my passion for black and white photography I found myself wandering into a look I call ‘Gotham’.
I have a passion for timelapse as well, so it wasn’t long before the two processes started to merge in my mind, and the concept for Gotham City SF was born! Over the intervening years I have collected and edited this footage while juggling my freelance career and time working at Lytro (a new camera technology).
This film means a lot to me. It is one of the biggest personal projects I’ve ever worked on.

https://vimeo.com/119318850
(Direktlink)

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Meerestiere in makro, timelapsed: …meanwhile…

Sandro Bocci war im Meer unterwegs und hat sehr beeindruckende Makroaufnahmen von den Bewohnern mitgebracht. Trippy.

…Meanwhile… shows the world of marine animals like corals and sponges, at high magnification and during long time span through the timelapse.
This is an infinitesimal part of the wonderful world in which we live and of which we should take better care. A trip through a different perspective that would encourage reflection on the consequences of our actions on each scale of space and time.
Enjoy the vision…


(Direktlink, via Devour)

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High Resolution Time-Lapse von Rio de Janeiro

Sehr beeindruckendes Time-Lapse Video in Superauflösung von Joe Capra.

„10328×7760 – A 10K Timelapse Demo“ is a video I put together showcasing the extreme resolution of the PhaseOne IQ180 camera of which it was shot. This footage comes from some shots I did while shooting 4K and 8K timelapses in Rio De Janeiro for a major electronics manufacturer. Each shot is comprised of hundreds individual still images, each weighing in at a whopping 80 megapixels. Each individual raw frame measures 10328×7760 pixels.

Each shot was very minimally processed and included curves, input sharpening, saturation adjustments. The h264 compression really kills alot of the fine detail. No noise reduction was done on any of the shots. I tried to keep the shots as close to raw as possible so you may see some dust spots, noise, and manual exposure changes I made while shooting. For a final video edit these adjustments would be smoothed out and fixed. Normally I run shots where I manually change exposure during the shot through LRTimelapse, but unfortunately the program can’t seem to handle such huge raw files. I also had to loop some shots in order to have enough runtime to do some zooms, so you may see a jump in the footage here and there.


(Direktlink, via BoingBoing)

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Boston Layer-Lapse

Der Clip hier ist schon etwas älter, The Creators Project hatte zu der von Julian Tryba angewandten Technik mit dem Namen Layer-Lapse schon vor fünf Monaten ein Interview, aber ich habe das heute erst entdeckt und finde es visuell sehr, sehr abgefahren. Für diese zweieinhalb Minuten hat der Mann 150.000 Fotos, 6 Terrabyte Daten und 450 Arbeitsstunden benötigt. Der Aufwand hat sich gelohnt. Finde ich.

Er setzt seinen Timelapse aus verschiedenen Bildbearbeitungstechniken minutiös zusammen und verwandelt die Architektur Bostons in mehrere Schichten aus Zeit und Raum. Jedes Einzelbild repräsentiert verschiedene zeitliche Phasen und lässt Wolken aufplatzen, Lichter blitzen und Fenster tanzen. „Ich erreichte einen Punkt, an dem ich mich entschloss, nicht länger das zu machen, von dem ich dachte, dass andere Leute es sehen wollten“, so Tryba gegenüber The Creators Project. „Stattdessen kreierte ich, was ich für am besten aussehend hielt.“

https://vimeo.com/108792063
(Direktlink)

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Berlin, timelapsed

Ein bisschen sind selbst mir die Timelapse-Video so langsam ein wenig über, aber eines aus Berlin gucke ich mir dann doch noch ganz gerne mal an. Dieses hier kommt von Matthias Makarinus, der auch schon Berlin Dynamic verantwortlich war und schreibt:

Three years after my last timelapse project “Berlin Dynamic”, which illustrated Berlin’s city life with its trains, airport or public swimming pools, it’s now all about the time. My new project “Berlin Time” will show you the most famous locations and sights in Germany’s capital at different seasons and day times in a dynamic fashion. There is deserted places in the morning, when the lights are still off and it’s slowly getting light. At noon, the city is in a hurry and filled with life until the late evening, when the city lights relume. In the winter, Berlin’s icy river Spree reposes, while the city keeps in fast motion, such as its famous Christmas markets and in summer, while most people already sleep, there is a thunderstorm almost unperceivedly lighting the night’s skyline.


(Direktlink, via Gilly)

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15 Länder in drei Jahren, timelapsed

Kien Lam hat in den letzten drei Jahren 15 Länder bereist und so wie früher immer alle ganz viele Fotos von ihren Reisen mitgebracht haben, hat er vor Ort jeweils kurze Timelapse-Videos gemacht, die er hier in einen Clip geschnitten hat. Das ist der wahrscheinlich kurzweiligste Urlaubsdia-Vortrag, den ich je gesehen habe.

Over the last 3 years, I’ve traveled through 15 countries and captured a series of photographs in almost every city I visited, compressing several minutes to over an hour’s worth of real time and movement into a few seconds of video. From Burning’s Black Rock City to celebrating the Holi Festival of Colors in India, the world is just a damn beautiful place.

https://vimeo.com/115832476
(Direktlink)

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Timelapse von der ISS

Esa-Astronaut Alexander Gerst hat während seinem Aufenthalt auf der ISS allerhand Timelapse-Videomaterial zusammengetragen, was gestern in Form dieses Videos auf YouTube veröffentlicht wurde. Nice.

Watch Earth roll by through the perspective of ESA astronaut Alexander Gerst in this six-minute timelapse video from space. Combining 12 500 images taken by Alexander during his six-month Blue Dot mission on the International Space Station this Ultra High Definition video shows the best our beautiful planet has to offer.

Marvel at the auroras, sunrises, clouds, stars, oceans, the Milky Way, the International Space Station, lightning, cities at night, spacecraft and the thin band of atmosphere that protects us from space.

Often while conducting scientific experiments or docking spacecraft Alexander would set cameras to automatically take pictures at regular intervals. Combining these images gives the timelapse effect seen in this video.


(Direktlink, via Blogrebellen)

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