keskiviikko 25. toukokuuta 2016

PictureCorrect.com: How to do Day-to-Night Motion Timelapse Photography with Traffic

Mark Thorpe has created a step-by-step video tutorial on how to shoot a day-to-night traffic timelapse. Read on for the tutorial, Mark’s top tips for starting out with timelapse photography, and his transition from wildlife to urban jungle:

In this tutorial, Mark gets amongst the hustle and bustle of Japan’ s largest city, Yokohama, to teach you how to shoot a day-to-night traffic timelapse using the Syrp Genie Mini and Ballhead to introduce motion.

moving cars long exposure

He covers:

  • scouting for the best place to capture a dynamic urban timelapse
  • choosing the right camera settings for an urban scene, including an introduction to using the Kelvin white balance setting
  • setting up the Syrp Genie Mini with the app to control the camera’s movement throughout the timelapse

using app for timelapse

  • manually ramping through shutter speed and ISO to maintain exposure throughout the timelapse
  • editing the timelapse in Adobe Lightroom and LRTimelapse Pro

How Mark Got Started in Timelapse

Mark’s career as a videographer all began with a little white lie. Having learned how to dive during his time with the French Foreign Legion, Mark moved to the Canary Islands to continue SCUBA diving. Despite having never shot underwater, he bluffed his way into becoming a videographer for a local dive operator, producing souvenir videos for tourists and learning everything he needed to on the fly. It was this role that set the stage for the rest of his career:

“Happily it all went smoothly, but the experience of filming beneath the waves had ignited a fire in me. I’d found the direction I would take with my career. It wasn’t a path to riches in the financial sense but the experiences I would have over the course of the next twenty or so years, one simply couldn’t put a price on them.”

underwater videography

Fast forward to 2008, Mark took up a cameraman / field tech position with National Geographic, based in Washington, DC, and spent the following few years travelling the world to film a wide range of marine species such as the Great White, Tiger Shark, and Sperm Whales.

It was during this time that he began shooting more and more stills, and at the end of his contract with National Geographic, Mark moved to Bali where he shot his first timelapse:

“At that time I was very much into the whole RED Camera scene and was in repeated email contact with Tom Lowe who produced the incredible ‘Timescapes’ film. If I’d be honest I would say it was watching that which inspired me to give timelapse a spin.”

Transitioning from mainstream wildlife imaging to timelapse was a relatively smooth affair. Mark saw the production value of timelapse in short filmmaking, something he has been involved in since his most recent move to Japan, where he and his wife now reside with their young son. As the cameras in smart devices become more and more diverse and capable, Mark has found himself navigating new areas of imaging, looking at incorporating them in to shooting wildlife imaging and has even started to shoot short films with an iPhone6s Plus.

While not a permanent move, Japan offers a vibrant mix of sights and sounds:

“I’ve replaced waves with buildings, fish with people, and the silence of the depths with the cacophony of the largest metropolitan city on the planet.”

timelapse of day night traffic

For balance, Mark often finds himself heading out to the vast open spaces and mountainous regions just outside of city limits—with sights like Mount Fuji only 90 minutes away, there’s still plenty of natural areas to explore.

5 Tips for Getting Started in Timelapse Photography

Starting out in photography can be pretty daunting, so as well as his tutorial, here are Mark’s top five tips to help you get started:

  1. Vision comes before gear. The best camera won’t make you better but your vision of how to present a scene, irrespective of the tools you use, will allow people to fully appreciate your talent.
  2. Be mindful of others. You are out to get your shot, but don’t do so at the expense of others who may already be set up in the location.
  3. If working in a green area or particularly with wildlife to please respect that area, don’t leave trash or damage it just to facilitate your presence and sequence.
  4. Always be honest with yourself and your abilities. A lot of people push personal endurance and safety limits these days to get those extreme shots. Know your limits and shoot just to the precipice of them. Don’t put yourself, or others, at any greater risk than you have to.
  5. Be humble. You may have shot the spots off of the world’ s best timelapse sequence, but there will always be someone snapping at your heels.

About the Author
Mark Thorpe is a renowned underwater cameraman, photographer, and EMMY award winner.


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