6 January 2009

Low-cost HD time-lapse photography using DSLR's: a quick HOWTO

After pushing my trusty FZ-50 as far as it could go, I ended up investing in a DSLR which has treated me very well. What's most impressive is the level of low-cost, DIY hackability that becomes available once you move on to an SLR.

As an example: high definition video. A few months ago I put together a pair of time-lapse, 'tilt-shifted' videos using a DSLR, a linux laptop and some post-processing. The results:



Dawn and Dusk in mini San Francisco was posted to laughingsquid, and from there I was privileged to be asked by George Lever to add the video to the Citypulse collection. It's currently on show at Citypulse at the tower in Santiago, Chile right now:





The recipe needed for making the videos was actually relatively simple:

Equipment
  • Canon EOS 450D (Rebel XSi)
  • USB cable to connect 450D to laptop
  • Netbook (Aspire One) running Mandriva 2009 (any laptop will suffice)
  • gphoto 2.4.3 installed on laptop
  • tripod (sturdier the better)
  • Photoshop (or gimp)
  • Quicktime (or mencoder)
Technique
  • You'll need to pick a subject - get as high up as you can. I've found that people don't work all that well in time-lapse videos, but traffic and slow moving things (especially boats, clouds) are awesome
  • Set up the camera on the tripod; use spot metering and aperture priority to reduce flicker, and turn auto-focus off
  • Connect the laptop to the camera, and use this command line for gphoto: gphoto2 --set-config capture=on --capture-image-and-download -I 5
  • You could probably also use the bundled Canon software, but I've never tried it
  • I capture an image every 4-5 seconds, but you can crank this up or down depending on what you're capturing
  • You'll end up with a long sequence of images
  • These can either be fed directly into Quicktime to make a movie, or you can run them through gimp or photoshop first to tweak/post-process them
  • I added a fake 'tilt-shift' effect on a few of the sequences (I'll try to post a guide on how to do it for real soon) using photoshop - see tutorial here.
It's a relatively simple technique, and if you have a DSLR chances are you probably already have all the equipment and software needed already, making it a low-cost hack.

6 comments:

  1. Anonymous9:52 am

    Nice work. Who's the artist / song you used in your second post?

    ReplyDelete
  2. I believe its 'Golden Age', by Beck (from the album Sea Change).

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  3. Anonymous3:36 pm

    Wow dude awesome work. thanks for all the neat ideas. keep them coming.

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  4. Anonymous3:50 am

    you are so awesome.. i just found your site and all i can say is.. im pretty amazed! thanks for this whole project! cheers from germany

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  5. I run windows 7 on my Laptop, do I still use gphoto for this? I take it that the images go directly to the computer instead of memory card?
    Thanks for posting this, its awesome.

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  6. @stendec: I'm not sure if gphoto is supported on windows 7, unfortunately :( However, you should be able to use the software that comes with most recent canon DSLR's to control the camera on windows.

    ReplyDelete

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