Incredible 360 Degree Music Video
- At November 27, 2009
- By Neil Creek
- In Video
2
You may know that I’m a big fan of panoramic photography, so when I discovered this video, I was completely blown away. This music video is shot completely in 360 panoramic video, to amazing effect.
Read More»Chasing a Comet, Finding Much More
- At March 03, 2009
- By Neil Creek
- In Night
11
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My good friend and exceptionally talented astrophotographer, Phil Hart invited me to go with him last weekend, to a country observing site to photograph Comet Lulin, and test out the 5D2 as an astrophotography camera. As you can see above, we were successful!
Below are a selection of my favourite photos and multimedia from the night, with descriptions. There are two embedded movies and two panoramas, which require Flash 9 to be installed [Download Flash]. Make sure you look at the panorama at the very bottom. I’m very proud of that one! :)
Top: The comet image was taken with Phil’s camera and lens, but I chose the composition and setup, and merged the images before processing. I guess you could call it a colaboration! Canon 40D, 200mm f2.8, 8 x 120sec exposures stacked and processed.
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Above: A beautiful young moon watched over us as we set up our equipment.
Above: Phil carries his telescope, used only for astrophotography, from the car to the tripod. Watch this movie in High Def at YouTube.
Click here to view a larger version of this panorama.
Above: A spherical panorama of our observing field, at the Leon Mow dark sky site, near Heathcote, owned by the Astronomical Society of Victoria (ASV). There were another dozen or so people observing on a different field, dedicated to telescopic observation, rather than astrophotography.
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Above: For much of the night, Phil used my new 5D MkII on his telescope, as seen above, to photograph the comet and to test the capabilities of the camera. I was content to let him use it, as I’m very curious to know its astrophotography capabilities. First impressions from Phil is that it is a very capable astrophotography camera. I entertained myself by continuing to shoot with my 350D.
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Above: Phil uses the 5D2 on his 530mm f3.3 telescope to photograph Comet Lulin, which can just be seen as a tiny green dot to the left of the bright blue Altair, above Phil’s hear near the top of the photo.
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Above: Phil and I weren’t the only ones photographing the comet. Another ASV member is seen here controlling his telescope from an attached laptop. All of these photographs with foreground elements and the stars behind were captured in single exposures, and not composited. They were typically 30 second exposures at 18mm f3.5 and 1600ISO on the Canon 350D. It’s amazing how good a dark sky can look in camera.
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Above: While the 5D2 was clicking away shooting an automated sequence, we visited the observation field, and were able to observe Comet Lulin through a gigantic pair of binoculars, 100mm (4in) in diameter. It was truly an incredible sight.
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Above: I also turned my 350D to the iconic Southern Cross for a 30 second exposure with my 50m f1.8. The stars are incredibly dense and beautiful in this area of the sky.
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Above: Once Phil had completed his tests with the 5D2, I was itching to get the fisheye lens onto the camera, to take advantage of the full frame and photograph the whole sky in a single shot. I did a sequence of almost 200 photos to create a time lapse, but for the photo above, I stacked 14 of the exposures together to minimise the noise and increase the brightness of the stars.
Night Sky Time Lapse by Fisheye.
Above is the full time lapse sequence built from the nearly 200 photos taken. Unfortunately the compression in the video at Vimeo doesn’t look great, but it’s better than the dreadful quality of the version at YouTube.
Click here to view a larger version of this panorama.
Above: Finally, I experimented with the all-sky photograph, as seen above, and turned it into an interactive panorama that you can click on and drag to look around the whole night sky. It’s really worth seeing this one bigger, so please click the link above. This has inspired me to try an photograph an all-sky panorama with my 50mm lens, and stitch all of the image together, to make a highly detailed interactive panorama of the night sky!
[Update] Phil just posted his own blog entry on the evening. Go check it out and see how a REAL astrophotographer shoots a comet – his photo is *gorgeous*: http://www.philhart.com/node/127
Trip to the Hills – Day 3: Snow!
- At November 02, 2008
- By Neil Creek
- In People
2
Continuing on from last month’s series of posts about our weekend trip to the Victorian highlands, here’s day three, the long-awaited trip to the snow!
This was the first time my nieces had seen snow (and only about the 5th for me!), and naturally making a snowman and tobogganing were essential activities. The responsibility of ensuring the girls had as much fun possible on the slopes fell to my father and I. I think we enjoyed ourselves at least as much as my nieces, but we had nowhere near the energy they did :)
The following six photos were taken by Naomi.
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Please click on the panorama below to see the full sized version. This small image doesn’t do it justice.
Rough as guts panorama of my desk
- At July 25, 2008
- By Neil Creek
- In Experimental
7
Tuesday, while at Mike’s place admiring his beautiful aquarium, I saw this cool photo collage he had on his wall, of a pretty seaside building made with many overlapping photos. I thought it was a very cool idea. Kind of like a rough panorama. Then yesterday browsing through one of the blogs I follow, I saw this post which reminded me I’d seen this kind of stuff online before.
Laurie linked to some of Heather Champ’s photos on Flickr as her inspiration, and these were so cool, that I just had to have a go myself.
It was late, the light was terrible, but I didn’t mind. I figured the rough, rushed look was part of what made these composites cool. So I grabbed my camera, stuck on the 50mm lens, set to f1.8 at 1/50th and ISO1600, and quickly and deliberately roughly took a couple dozen photos of my desk to stick together.
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I couldn’t help myself but use the panorama stitching software to join them together. It made the alignment pretty simple, but it warped the photos to fit, as well as colour corrected and blended the photos. Normally you want this for a panorama, but the appeal of these photos is their inaccuracies.
Overall I’m happy with the result, but next time I’ll leave the camera on auto everything, including focus, and I’ll put them all together in photoshop, for that hand-made collage look.
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