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-   -   Flower Timelaps and Bee Macro Footage (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/canon-vixia-series-avchd-hdv-camcorders/92344-flower-timelaps-bee-macro-footage.html)

Jason Brown April 25th, 2007 12:09 AM

Flower Timelaps and Bee Macro Footage
 
Just trying out the new cam. Fun.

Stalking a Bee while it mollests my apple tree blossoms
http://208.109.166.78/misc/beetime.zip

Cactus Bloom at 20,000% speed
http://208.109.166.78/misc/cactus8k.mov.zip

Austin Meyers April 25th, 2007 12:46 AM

problems playing...
 
looks like the bee time one isn't working. it says searching for data in "beetime.mov" as well as "Newborn.m4a" make sure it's not a ref movie.

Mike Scotchinson April 25th, 2007 01:28 AM

That bee footage is really nice. Is that macro with the stock HV20 lens or is there a macro adapter on there? How far from the bee were you?

I wasn't able to open either in quicktime, but they did play fine with the VLC media player.

Daymon Hoffman April 25th, 2007 03:38 AM

Great macro footage and time laps. Would love to know how you did both of those. :) Thanks for sharing.

Just like others i had some strange anomalies with the macro footage. But managed to get it to play good enough to watch.

Glenn Thomas April 25th, 2007 04:58 AM

Excellent footage Jason. Especially like the shots of the bee. Must have been a tame bee to let you get that close.

Jason Brown April 25th, 2007 12:46 PM

I'm terribly sorry about that guys. I was lazy and edited it all just in quicktime pro and didn't see that i was resourcing the audio track and a 2nd clip instead of imbeding. I had to Save As instead of just Save to flatten it completly. I've tested it in Windows (parallels) as well now and works fine. I updated to link in the first post.

the bee footage was done with the stock lens and handheld. so my camera was about 1 inch from the bee. he paid very little attention to me.

Ken Ross April 25th, 2007 02:38 PM

Hey Jas, did you get nervous getting that close to the bee? Nice stuff though.

Greg Boston April 25th, 2007 03:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jason Brown (Post 667312)
the bee footage was done with the stock lens and handheld. so my camera was about 1 inch from the bee. he paid very little attention to me.

As a beekeeper, I have to tell you that 'she' paid very little attention to you. (hehe)

Male bees, known as drones, have no stinger, and their proboscis is too short to gather nectar. They do have very large eyes so that they can find the queen to mate with her on her mating flight (the only time she leaves the hive unattended). The sad part is, the male that mates with the queen pays for it with his life. Another sad note for drones is that they can't do any work to maintain the hive so when winter comes and it's time to downsize, guess who gets kicked out into the cold to die.

The reason 'she' paid very little attention to you is because she is not guarding her hive and has no interest in stinging you unless you grab her or she feels like she is getting squished. She will die if she stings and survival instinct means using it as a last resort.

-gb-

Jason Brown April 25th, 2007 03:14 PM

Great info Greg. Thanks.

I didnt get very nervous Ken after the first couple of flowers. I did jump back twice when she flew towards me but that was to get to this other flower. I spent about 8min recording her and must have flew to 20 different flowers in that time.

Greg Boston April 25th, 2007 06:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jason Brown (Post 667400)
Great info Greg. Thanks.

I downloaded the video after my DSL connection came back up. Very nice! This HV20 is a winner afaik.

-gb-

Ray Neil April 25th, 2007 06:47 PM

Jason, would you be so kind as to break down in more detail how you achieved the time lapse? Was it in camera or post-production? Also, white balance and aperture don't seem to be changing as the light changes. How did you adjust that?

Thanks a lot.

Jason Brown April 26th, 2007 12:20 AM

I set the camera infront of the flower for 1 hour and hit record. I set the aperture manually to F8 and set Manual focus. I then imported my footgate into final cut and dragged my video onto the timeline and rightclicked on the clicp and selected speed and entered 60000%. Saved it out as a MOV. I didn't touch white balance in camera or post. it was set to automatic.

I did a new time lapse today of just one flower.

http://208.109.166.78/misc/cactussolo1080p.zip

Daymon Hoffman April 26th, 2007 12:36 AM

very nice Jason. Thanks for sharing in depth info. Its great to learn that your macro stuff was done with a stock HV20 and nothing else! Steller camera. getting your second Timelaps now. :)

Steve Royer April 26th, 2007 10:56 AM

Yeah these are fantastic videos! I'm curious what your shutter speed was on the bee video. Downloading your next one, and please keep posting these "stock HV20" videos... it's great to see how things look out of the box. I'm 90% sold on this camera over any other.

Fergus Anderson April 26th, 2007 12:47 PM

amazing footage

Im am struggling to keep my footage is such sharp focus while zoomed in


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