After the sunset on New Years Day in Huntington Beach California, I took my cameras from the beach and set them up on the pier for some Timelapse goodness.
The lighting on the pier at night was pretty wonky, and while I color corrected it to look decent, I decided B&W might just be the way to go.
So this is the same timelapse repeated in here. The timelapse was done in camera with a 1 sec gap. The photos were shot at 1/50th of a sec.
The first timelapse is played at 100% speed as it was compiled in camera. After the transition about 20 secs in, I repeated the same video, but slowed it down by 50% in Movavi. I am kind of leaning towards liking the second version of the timelapse better. It feels like they are skating almost. The first one at 100%, it's almost like the people are moving too fast.
So I would be interested in everyone's thoughts on this. Since timelapse is purely subjective, there is no right or wrong speed I think. Because it can be affected by the gap between photos chosen by the photographer. And then also in the video editor, the photographer can choose what speed to have the final video play at.
All comments are welcome,
Jim
The lighting on the pier at night was pretty wonky, and while I color corrected it to look decent, I decided B&W might just be the way to go.
So this is the same timelapse repeated in here. The timelapse was done in camera with a 1 sec gap. The photos were shot at 1/50th of a sec.
The first timelapse is played at 100% speed as it was compiled in camera. After the transition about 20 secs in, I repeated the same video, but slowed it down by 50% in Movavi. I am kind of leaning towards liking the second version of the timelapse better. It feels like they are skating almost. The first one at 100%, it's almost like the people are moving too fast.
So I would be interested in everyone's thoughts on this. Since timelapse is purely subjective, there is no right or wrong speed I think. Because it can be affected by the gap between photos chosen by the photographer. And then also in the video editor, the photographer can choose what speed to have the final video play at.
All comments are welcome,
Jim