Ken Diewert
December 29th, 2009, 11:08 PM
I've got a project coming up where I'm going to shoot a still image timelapse with either a Canon 5d2 or a 50d using the 80n3 interval timer. I've shot timelapse in video with mixed results, so I'm going to try a few using stills only.
From what I understand, i just save the images to a folder and import the first, then check 'open a still image sequence, and enter the last number of the last frame.
I'm using 8.0c and if anyone has done a still timelapse I'd appreciate any tips. I tried importing some jpegs as a test run, but was stymied when the sequence was broken which it often is so I could only get 20 or so frames at a time.
I'm assuming - though may be wrong - that the default setting will be 30 (or 29.97) fps. In which case I'd plan to shoot xxxx number of frames for xxx duration final output. The output is web so I'll just set up for low res jpegs unless someone warns me otherwise. I'll try one or two in advance of the project to try it out - though I don't like running up the shutter counts on cameras just for the hell of it. - at those shooting rates it's about 1,800 shutter clicks per finished minute.
From what I understand, i just save the images to a folder and import the first, then check 'open a still image sequence, and enter the last number of the last frame.
I'm using 8.0c and if anyone has done a still timelapse I'd appreciate any tips. I tried importing some jpegs as a test run, but was stymied when the sequence was broken which it often is so I could only get 20 or so frames at a time.
I'm assuming - though may be wrong - that the default setting will be 30 (or 29.97) fps. In which case I'd plan to shoot xxxx number of frames for xxx duration final output. The output is web so I'll just set up for low res jpegs unless someone warns me otherwise. I'll try one or two in advance of the project to try it out - though I don't like running up the shutter counts on cameras just for the hell of it. - at those shooting rates it's about 1,800 shutter clicks per finished minute.