Intervaluino Test Video

Saturday, June 21st, 2008 | art, electronics, make, movies & tv, photography

This video shows 4 hours of clouds at dusk, compressed to 45 seconds; it was taken with the Intervaluino on my Canon EOS 400D (manual focus, manual exposure/f-stop settings):

I’m quite happy with the result; there are some slight light-dark flickers which I don’t like, but those are probably caused by glare from the sun shining onto the side of the lens. By now I’m convinced that a prerequisite to getting good results using an SLR is to turn off autofocus and set your exposure values and f-stops manually – you can’t trust your camera to keep the values smooth.

You can find info about stitching jpgs into a movie on Metafilter.

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4 Comments to Intervaluino Test Video

[...] If you want to see a time-lapse video made with the Intervaluino, check out this post. [...]

tomas saraceno
November 18, 2008

Hello somebody know a program that automatically, every time that a pictures it is captured and storage in computer by a digital camera, became a frame of a movie (24 frames per second or variable….) and you can see online video Time Lapse.
Lord Yo do you have a e-mail address to contact you?
thanks tomas

Lord Yo
November 18, 2008

@Tomas: Not that I know of; there are a couple of programs that stitch pictures into a movie, but I don’t know of any that can do it real-time and upload it (interesting idea though). Read this Metafilter post, it might help you with your question: http://ask.metafilter.com/50288/Stitching-7000-jpegs-into-one-video-file

You can contact me at honeyjar /at/ sporez /dot/ com.

Jimbo
January 18, 2010

you can easily import photos in to final cut pro, set the default stills import time to 2 frames, or one if you want high res, and then select all, drop them on a time line, export results…

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