I shoot RAW from an older Canon 5D which Resolve does not read natively. So there’s a bit of a conversion step going from CR2. My typical workflow is to use Adobe RAW to process the images, then import the RAW directly to AE to render out with whatever repositioning or cropping. Let’s not forget LR Timelapse[0] as part of the workflow too. [0] https://lrtimelapse.com/.
– Source: Hacker News
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4 months ago
Check out this plugin: https://lrtimelapse.com/.
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over 1 year ago
As for the changing of exposure at dawn in that timelapse I shared, that’s exposure ramping, and I make settings changes on my camera as the light levels are changing to maintain a good exposure, and then I smooth those changes in post using the super-helpful program LRTimelapse (which works in conjunction with Lightroom, so you need to be in the Adobe ecosystem to use it). LRtimelapse is absolutely key to almost…
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over 1 year ago
Check out LRTimelapse, it’s a great owner-supported tool which works in conjunction with Lightroom. It’s great for seamless transitions between big light changes like sunsets, without awkward shutter-speed effects like sudden smearing.
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over 1 year ago
Is it an image sequence? LRTimelapse might help you.
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over 1 year ago
Pretty sure Nate uses the same workflow I do, since I followed his tutorial haha (see this link), but basically, it’s LRTimelapse (Level and Ramp Timelapse, not Lightroom Timelapse). It’s a separate program that allows you to assign keyframes for a sequence, then edit those keyframes in Lightroom (with only a few restrictions on how you can edit them), then LRT will automagically generate the setting for the…
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almost 2 years ago
The amount of flicker and changes in lighting going on here I think you would benefit from some software called LRTimelapse…
Https://lrtimelapse.com/.
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almost 3 years ago
Love the shadows the buildings cast. https://lrtimelapse.com/ has some good deflickering tools.
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over 3 years ago
Also LR Timelapse can keyframe Lightroom settings when exporting image sequences.
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over 3 years ago
For sure, blue hour would make that tricky. If you’re interested in dealing with the flicker there’s programs like LR timelapse, or some other methods of capturing things in the vein of “Holy Grail” time-lapses.
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over 3 years ago