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Tutorial on how to turn your DSLRs stills timelapse into video

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Check out this blog on how you set up the 7D or 5DmkII to actually take the stills. But if your camera has an interval function like the Nikon D300, D700 etc this tutorial works exactly the same for you. Some compacts let you take interval stills too I believe but not sure which ones.

Normally I would recommend using RAW mode to take your stills with but I used JPEGs for this tutorial for speed and to be honest the subject wasn’t that interesting, just shot out of my window at the Clift hotel in San Francisco using my 5dmkII and my 35mm F1.4 lens taking one photo every 7 seconds and the shutter was set to 1/20th and the ISO was 100. Lens was at f8. Purely used as a demonstration for doing post.

timelapse tutorialDoing timelapse with the stills function gives you enormous flexibility and the ability to get some truly mind blowing low light timelapse sequences. Much better than you can do with a video camera.

How to make video timelapse from DSLR stills from Philip Bloom on Vimeo.

Tutorial on how to take your stills taken with your DSLR and turn them into great timelapse HD video.

Dungeness timelapse experiment with Canon 7d from Philip Bloom on Vimeo.

Inspired by Tom @ Timescapes I went out to my favourite filming location in the UK, Dungeness on the south coast to see what I could get.

Responses

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  • hey ! phil do i have to get the timer controller in order to do a time lapse on a canon 7d ? or the camera come with a especial mode for it >?

    thank you !

    • yep. type in timelapse into search engine and you will get the info you need.

  • I figured it was the right time to say hello. Happy to be here! I’ve Been reading a lot of posts but am not so famaliar with how the boards operate just yet. If I dropped my helo line in the wrong part of the forum, I hope a mod will put it where it is supposed to go. I guess that since I read the posts here more often than not, it would be where I said hello to everyone for the first time. Well, thanks a lot and I hope to learn a lot more from someone of the already great information that I’ve found here.
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  • This is weird. Something new for me. What the interval did you use to capture those images? Did you just purely use Quicktime to do the timelapse? What weird to me is how quicktime blend those images together to a smooth motion. It’s not choppy.

    • all just quicktime. depends on how frequently you take a photo that depends on the choppiness.

  • Thanks for your inspirational work, Philip. Having trouble with this workflow in Snow Leopard – I am using QT 7, not the useless QT X, but when I create my image sequence, all I get is a black video. The images are fine – I am currently just processing the timelapse via After Effects instead, but I’d love to be able to use the (simpler) Quicktime 7 approach if you know of a workaround.

    Any thoughts?

    Nathan

  • hi qtx doesn’t work with this…. as you say rightly say… There seems to be no way for using qt7 pro on my mac that has 10.6 and the rubbish qt x.
    Do you have a work around please ?
    The great thing is Apple allow you to buy qt 7 pro (as on my MBPro) Then doesn’t allow you access to it !! (£20 for nowt)

    Thanks for this lovely easy tutorial…

    Just wish that apple were as user friendly on this subject.

    best JDL

    PS I know this an old tutorial BUt if you are scanning this page would loooove to know

    • do you not have qt7 anymore?

      • yes BUT canna seem to get it to load… qtx overrides it (I am also asking apple about this)

        this is since loaded 10.6

        (sorry didn’t reply earlier)

        • Big Sorry… It is a case of RTFM… You can load qt7 on 10.6 it just doesn’t do it by itself…

          you have to go back to the disk that come with 10.6 find qt7 and then reload from the install disk….

          best jdl

          • yes, for some reason i didn’t need to reinstall it. It was still in my folder, hidden but there

        • use quicktime pro 7. on your install disc

  • I found some freeware called VirtualDub that will assemble your photo time lapse and will de-flicker your images I was also able to save my time lapse as uncompressed HD (I think).

    VirtualDub:
    http://sourceforge.net/projects/virtualdub/

    Tutorial:
    http://timescapes.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=4&t=716&p=12083#p12083

    • cool. thanks for info John

      • Just returning the favor.

  • I’m getting great deal of exposure flicker in my time lapses any way around this besides manual mode?

    • you really should do manual for timelapse unless you are doing epic ones like I did.

      • I found a fix for exposure flicker using aperture priority mode at the timescapes forum. http://www.timescapes.org/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=4&t=1292

        • did you have any flicker problems in your 36hr time lapse?

          I use aperture priority mode for day to night otherwise I’ll be using manual.

          • no flicker issues somehow. i should have been in aperture priority mode

  • Dear Philip,

    I found a big problem when opening files as image sequence with Quicktime player v. 10,0 -the one which comes with snow leopard- as it does not support image sequences.

    Any idea on how to solve this?

    Thanks,

    Juan Mª

    P.D. Like very much your videos and tutorials.

    • hi Juan, use quicktime player 7. It is still on your hard drive. p

  • [...] who is writing extensively about using the new Canon DSLR for video, also recently offered this tutorial on Time Lapse video with stills: Doing timelapse with the stills function gives you enormous flexibility and the ability to get [...]

  • Philip,

    So what did you do to the “Speed” in the motion tab? I saw at 100% but where does is the sped up lapse adjustment made?

    I created a time lapse with my JVC HM100u and Canon 5DMkII (in video mode) side by side then adjusted the speed to 5000% – was not sure how else to do.

    Thanks for any info.
    -Randy

  • good stuff. even better was your super clean desktop, it got me searching how to make my desktop icons smaller. always an inspiration, thanks!

  • Philip, if you could check my work at blizzarworks.blip.tv, you could see some timelapses done with a Canon 20D on the first video. First I suggest importing the frames into After effects – for those who have it – where it can accept Raw format and so make any colour correction within the 32bit range. And then render it into any format… What I still don’t know how to deal is the damn flickering… There’s a plugin within the Tinderbox collection that tries to correct it, but it’s never satisfactory…
    Do you have a special way to deal with this? Thanks.

  • Love it thanks!

    I didn’t know quicktime could do that.

    Never thought to use the extra resolution of the still images for doing digital zooms / pans.

    Now I have to get an intervalometer for my GH1 so I can some of these!

  • [...] by Tom over at Timescapes, I decided to borrow an intervalometer from the guys at The Flash Centre. Philip Bloom’s workflow tips were very useful and I had a subject in mind in the shape of the beautiful, newly finished Infinity Bridge over the [...]

  • Great tutorial as always. If you want to push the capture process even further, I wrote a short article on capturing the images in RAW (I used SRAW2 on my 5DMk2) and then post-processing them in Lightroom before importing them into Quicktime Pro as an image sequence. By shooting in RAW you have far more control over color balance and exposure. By using the “small raw” formats you can keep the file sizes reasonable with still plenty of resolution headroom for even 1080p files.

    http://dmg-photography.com/blog/2009/10/lr-edited-tl-frames

  • Oh! Would have loved to have seen this a week ago, Would have done better in my first attempts at timelapses, check it out: http://www.vimeo.com/7115014

  • Is there a Timelapse Function on the Gh1 also? Cause I like the look of this timelapses very much and would really like to test some things out without buying just another DSLR again…

  • Thanks for keeping it easy for the beginners like me. :)

    • you are welcome. You can get a lot more complicated with RAW files and curves in the frame size change. I will cover that in a future one.

  • Nice timing Phil, just got myself an Intervalometer yesterday

    • cool. you will love it. I adore DSLR timelapse

  • When you exported the 1080p version does quicktime scale and crop it? Because the original video wasn’t 16:9, or is there some weird squeezing going on?

  • Just something to note (I’m sure Phil already knows this)… linear pullouts are great, but sometimes for a more realistic look, logarithmic pullout… it’s a simple change that anyone can make using the points in the motion tab in Final Cut. In After Effects and Premier, you can even use a shortcut to generate a standard log curve! Sometimes this helps with big movements like this one that fill just did.

    • yes, i kept this tutorial very simple and very basic. It’s a starter tutorial for people just getting into it

 
 

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