Latest timelapse with DV camera
Moderator: Andreas Wideroe
Latest timelapse with DV camera
http://web.mac.com/johnnhud/iWeb/Site/C ... E7E2B.html
This timelapse was shot using the method that we discussed on this forum earlier this week. Namely hooking up a DV cam to iMovie and setting it to capture 1 frame every X seconds. I set this capture to capture 1 picture every 10 frames. Then I drove around my block while capturing right onto the MacBooks hard drive.
Ignore the text on the page of the link, it's not really relevent to the video that's posted...
This timelapse was shot using the method that we discussed on this forum earlier this week. Namely hooking up a DV cam to iMovie and setting it to capture 1 frame every X seconds. I set this capture to capture 1 picture every 10 frames. Then I drove around my block while capturing right onto the MacBooks hard drive.
Ignore the text on the page of the link, it's not really relevent to the video that's posted...
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Very good.
I shot this timelapse with a Olympus E1 still camera
http://www.fo-video.com/video/timelapsestgo.mov
I shot this timelapse with a Olympus E1 still camera
http://www.fo-video.com/video/timelapsestgo.mov
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Amazing.. did you use some sort of controller/software? How did you achieve the slow zoom (done in post?)I shot this timelapse with a Olympus E1 still camera
Production Notes
http://plaza.ufl.edu/ekubota/film.html
http://plaza.ufl.edu/ekubota/film.html
yes i used Olympus camedia Pro software, i linked PC and E1, each shot was stored in hard disk.Evan Kubota wrote:Amazing.. did you use some sort of controller/software? How did you achieve the slow zoom (done in post?)I shot this timelapse with a Olympus E1 still camera
I use vegas Video software. I joine all the shots in a avi video and do in this software a "digital zoom" without lost of quality because each pic is very big (2560 x 1920 pix)
very easy
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It is nice and simple..you don´t really need to hook up the camera with a computer.
You can just shoot one hour "ride" and than grab the timelapse of it with the "timelapse capture function" that is offered in your editing sofware (premiere6 for example.
The adventages are that you dont need the computer on the "set" and you can also choose the interval between frame captures...this is very usefull_you can change the speed in the scene or just find the best frequency for capturing for all different timelapse purposes...nice function really...does anybody use it in here?
...another adventage is in saving your hard drive space. you dont need to capture the whole one hour take to speed it up...you just grab several frames .
You can just shoot one hour "ride" and than grab the timelapse of it with the "timelapse capture function" that is offered in your editing sofware (premiere6 for example.
The adventages are that you dont need the computer on the "set" and you can also choose the interval between frame captures...this is very usefull_you can change the speed in the scene or just find the best frequency for capturing for all different timelapse purposes...nice function really...does anybody use it in here?
...another adventage is in saving your hard drive space. you dont need to capture the whole one hour take to speed it up...you just grab several frames .
one frame per minuteoskar wrote:AVR - great Timelapse !
Awesome and totally inspiring. The quality is super crisp and it looks really good. Usually I make all my timelapses with my 814XLS but this I have to try out with my Nikon D70.
Do you remember what kind of interval-time you had?
Nice job! Thanks for showing this for us.
Thanks for the compliment! Yes, it's true, you can just shoot a tape and capture it to the computer using the method you outlined. However, this limits you to making projects that transpire in less than 60 or 90 minutes. A trip around the block would be fine, but the rising and setting of the sun would require multiple tapes and would cause problems.peterson wrote:It is nice and simple..you don´t really need to hook up the camera with a computer.
You can just shoot one hour "ride" and than grab the timelapse of it with the "timelapse capture function" that is offered in your editing sofware
Secondly, if your like me, you love to shoot footage, but you HATE capturing it. (Any faster than realtime capture methods out there?) This eliminates that step. Taking a 10 minute ride all over again while capturing from tape to the computer is just annoying.

I have a small 2MP Canon S200 that can be controlled by the computer. Using a third party program like EZMacro you could set it up to take 1 picture at different intravles. I think it would run out of battery before an hour though. I take it that the camera you used was plugged into a powersource?avr wrote: one frame per minute