Hi Everyone,
Well, Christmas is almost upon us, personally I just finished decorating the tree, and it put me in a very holiday-ish mood, and anyway, I’ve always had a thing for Time-Lapse photography, but I’ve never been able to do it with my Fuji, so, upon looking forward to Christmas, I’m even more excited by the fact that I may be getting a Canon EOS 400D, which is capable of Time Lapse photography, and I cannot wait, it’s going to be very cool, and to show you what I mean by cool look at this:
That is most certainly interesting, and being able to do things like that will make me very happy. It’s quite simple really, all you need is:
- A DigiCam capable of Time Lapse photography
- A Computer, (Mac or PC), preferably a laptop
- Compiler tool, (I will use Quicktime Pro)
And that is all it takes for some cool time lapse work. I say, preferably a laptop, because that means that you could do this outdoors. With Nikons, I believe, (however don’t know for sure), that you can set it to timelapse for you, with no computer, the advantages are obvious, however, it’s not hard to realise you’ll need a big memory card if you do that.
I think that Canon’s bundled software has a timelapse recording capability with it, which means, out of the box timelapsing. If it does not, you can easily download software, for example, GBTimelapse, which allows timelapsing with most canon cameras.
Once you have the software sorted, it is a simple case of getting the shots. The subject can be of almost anything, for example, mountains with clouds rolling through them, a road with traffic on it. Somebody working, all sorts of things. And then you set up the camera, on a tripod preferably, or on a solid rest, taking the pictures. You’ll probably want to take a lot of shots to make sure the video isn’t only a few seconds worth of footage, maybe taking pics of the subject for hours, even days.
With the final pictures you can use quicktime, (very quick and easy), to go, File>Open Image Sequence, then you just select the pictures, and there you go.
Of course, the advantage of doing all these pictures with a new digital camera, rather than with an old fashioned video camcorder, and then speeding it up, is that you are left with a sequence of images that are already HD, and can be cut to any resolution you want, 1980×1080, 1280×720, 640×480, anything! Ready for use in any situation.
Anyway, I’ll let you know if/when I get my 400D, and when I do any time lapse work.
Hope you’re well,
Charlie -

