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Time-lapse

Time-lapsing is a trick of technology to get rid of our limited perception of time. By recording shots and playing them back at a different speed, one can reach to the other timescales, namely, the slow ones for time-lapses and the fast ones for slow-motion.

Our input

Fabrice-timelapsing-march2014.jpg

we currently work (as of 30 December (2013)) on time-lapsing of the Plaza Mayor from our vantage point at Mayorcita.

Carlos Sanchez's input

Our friend Carlos is also exploring time-lapsing and once in a while releases some publicly. Notable are:

Over time-lapses of interest

Of Madrid

There are many mind-boggling timelapses of Madrid.

  • Luis Caldevilla is a reference in timelapsing, and released various outstanding works on Madrid (see this one for instance).
  • Madrid. Timelapse. Advertising of the city that gives an overview of many important locations.
  • Un día en Gran Vía, a nice tribute to this major axis of the capital, with a nice match to the soundtrack.
  • Madrid desde el aire, a great compilation of various places, by Ryan San. The Author comments "Agradezco desde aqui a todos los porteros que no me han dejado subir a los respectivos áticos y comentarles que abran bien los ojos porque volveré."
  • Paco Castilla released timelapses of Madrid's big sky (see also here) with interesting patterns of creation/vanishing of clouds.
  • Bringing it to the next level: Hyperlapse through Madrid 2013 (pithy it's so short, but one can imagine the unbelievable amount of work). Note the dolly zoom on the Fallen Angel!

Technical bits

We work both with our Nikon D40 camera and our HTC smartphone.

Smartphone

We started with (http://www.lapseit.com/ LapseIt] (the nonfree Pro version), which however is buggy as it freezes or crashes completely if the repetition rate is too high.

There is a list here of other applications to try. To remedy the shortcoming of lapseit, I'll try them all in order until I find one that works well enough.

  1. 23 March (2014): TimeLapse!
  2. 30 March (2014): Tina Time-lapse

TimeLapse! looks good but does not save frames but exports the movie directly. We used it to capture the Sunset over the Palacio Real de Madrid.

D40 Photo camera

The D40 has no built-in feature, so we recourse to gphoto2~[2].

The following is a basic setting to capture (here every 30s):

gphoto2 --capture-image-and-download --filename "%Y-%m-%d..%H%M%S.jpg" --interval 30

Turning the frames into a movie

To assemble the frames into a movie (15 fps):

avconv -f image2 -r 15 -i imageSequence0000%04d.jpg -vcodec libx264 output.mp4

To add the timestamp on the image itself (say at position 10x470), use this script:

#!/bin/bash

timestamp=`date -r $1 +%H:%M`
echo $timestamp;
convert -draw "text 10,470 '$timestamp'" $1 $1.jpg

See also

Links