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117 lines
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117 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1449
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Title: HPR1449: Timelapse Video
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1449/hpr1449.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 03:08:55
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---
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You
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Good evening, my name is Peter or periscution 4. Some people might know me from the Colonel
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Panic Olga. Now a few episodes ago or actually it was episode 1,344. The Kenney Sun made
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a video of dinosaur egg hatching and at the start of the video you could see that there's
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a lot of flicker or strobe effect. Now Ken managed to control this by closing the curtains
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and adding his own ambient light. Now that's all well and good if you're making a video
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inside but if you're outside then you obviously can't control that. Now hopefully in this
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episode we'll discuss the problem of flicker or strobe in palm lights. Video is firstly
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how you can prevent it with the correct settings in your camera and secondly if you do happen
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to get some user deflicker script that was written I think in Perl that I found on the
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internet. But anyway let's first have a look at time lapse and the initial setup and some
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of the equipment that you're going to need. Well you probably can do time lapse video
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with a compact camera. You're going to need one that can take an image that you know
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over 15 or 20 seconds at some predetermined interval. I'm mainly going to concentrate on
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digital SLR. First of all you're going to need a tripod because this typically you're
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going to be taking images over an hour, two hours, four hours so it could even be a whole
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day. Secondly you're going to need a interferometer which sounds like a pretty impressive piece
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of tip but virtually all it does is automatically pushes the button, the shutter button for
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every 5, 10, 15, 20 seconds depending on how you know what you set it up for. I tend to
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shoot an image every 5 seconds that's going to give you you know 24 frames every two minutes.
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So virtually one second of your video represents two minutes of the real world. This is something
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that you need to play around with an experiment and it will depend a lot on your subject matter.
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Okay so now I've got the camera set up on a nice 30 tripod with taking an image. Well
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we haven't actually hit the shutter button yet to start taking this because what we've got
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to look at is setting the camera up to help prevent this time lapse flicker. Now what we're going
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to do is take the camera at an automatic mode and put it in manual mode. Now you want to set your
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shutter speed. Now typically one one hundred of a second or less. If you're taking video of
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like a city scape and something where you have people in it, one of the effects that you'll notice
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often when you do look at time lapse video with people and the buildings and that are nice and
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crisp but the people are slightly blurred and this is actually a pretty good effect and this can
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be achieved by even having a slower shutter speed. Maybe I don't know about one 30th or second perhaps
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one one eight even as long as you're you're sitting on a nice solid tripod your buildings and
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fixed structures are going to be still very clear but any cars or any anything with motion are
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going to have their blurring effect and it can be quite a pleasing effect to put into your video but
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once again what you've got to do is experiment with it. We've got we've got that we now we have to
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look at aperture. You want to close your aperture down a bit because otherwise you don't want a
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two shallow depth of field but once again there's something you need to play with. Get you put white
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balance right and these rules aren't setting concrete because as we know it's a juggling act
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between aperture shutter speed and of course the ISO depending on the available life but
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I would recommend that the first thing you do is set the correct aperture then look at shutter speed
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and then of course last resort then then just change your ISO and I know I've said this plenty
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of times and I'll say it again it's an experiment experiment and just see what's going to work on the
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the other important thing is manual focus because you don't want to set it on automatic focus and then
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something and then someone walks through your shot or whatever and then the camera focuses
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close and then it focuses far away that's not something you're looking for. The important thing here
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is put everything in manual mode. One problem you will run into is if you're going to try to shoot
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a sunrise. Now obviously you can't leave your camera in manual mode because it'll start off
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that you'll set it up for you know very where it's dark at early in the dawn and then the
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sun starts to come up and start to get brighter. Images are going to be way out you know just over
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exposed and get blown out the bugger in after a while you want to be able to see anything but just
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to be white hazing your photo. So what you have to do then is probably set it up in aperture priority
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and let your camera select the best shutter speed so you get the correct exposure. Now the other
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thing too that I don't shoot in raw when I do shoot in JPEG I don't even shoot in my highest JPEG
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quality because what we're going to do is convert the images down to the 1080 by 1920 or HD
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resolution to you know because you don't want any better than that there's no point because you
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be showing these you know typically on a telly or if you're uploading them to YouTube or whatever
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you don't even know that's sort of quality. So you're not messing around with you know 8 meat
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fire else there's really no need to shoot in raw and less you really want to sit down and go
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through them and make some really minor tweaks and then of course you're going to have to do a
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batch conversion on which really thousands and thousands of photos. One particular instance I did
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shoot in raw was when I was shooting the Milky Way in crux or the Southern Cross as I passed
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overhead. Now because obviously this is late at night with nothing but starlight that I shot
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at in raw and then did some enhancement and used I think it was you for raw and the batch conversion
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to make some changes to the gamma and brightness and saturation etc. So have a look at your subject
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and the style of time after and you know once again now it's just experiment with it. Okay so
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we finally got our camera set up and depending on what you take in a picture it's probably time
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you know to use in a volumeta and start your timer and off it goes and leave it for what could be
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an hour three hours or even you know I've taken literally thousands thousands pictures all day
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when I've been doing some construction work like putting the pool in the building in
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deck around it that's something I wanted to document but depending on what you do one thing for
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certain you're going to return your camera turn it off look at your counter and see you have
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literally taken hundreds to thousands of pictures. Now the next thing is what are you going to do
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for more? Well I'm glad you asked. Now firstly you know obviously copy them over to your computer
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of laptop whatever runny Linux. Now if you run them Windows I'm afraid I can't help you. Now after
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you've copied all the images over to a folder on your computer first of all you're going to make
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a directory called resize then we're going to use magnify which is part of the image magic
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packages to resize them down to 1920 by 1080 or you might want to make a 720p film or whatever
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but in my particular case I make them all HD resolution. Now rather than sitting on a
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rattle off a bunch of commands I'll put it in the show notes how eventually we'll use either
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mencoder or ffmp to finally render our video but okay so now that we've resized and we've
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magnify and hopefully this next step because we took the time to set up our camera that we
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totally didn't get any flicker but if we did I found a script and I know I'm going to butcher
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this bloge name but it was by a Ben jealous Tassoolus and I'm sorry Ben jealous if you listen
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but here at the script and like I said I'm pretty sure a pearl if you have a look in the show notes
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we'll put a link to it I'll either put it up on the kernel panic server or can I put it
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someone on the hpr server because I tried to find it again and I can't and I can't recall where
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I originally got it but anyway it'll be there in the show notes a link to it and it's called
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time lapse the flicker pl all we have to do now is use mencoder or ffmp or any other favorite
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applications that you like to convert a bunch of images into a video I've mentioned a few
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of the things I've used time lapse for and I'll also link a couple of them in the show notes
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or if you just do a quick search for Peter 64 Linux or one word time lapse you'll find
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quite a few on my YouTube channel okay so hopefully this is made a couple of years
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to get out try your hand at time lapse video thanks for taking the time to listen to me this has
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been Peter 64 for hacker public radio you know talk to you next time get a my name is jude
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