Timelapse photography

gazzaa

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Can anyone tell me if I can do time lapse photography with my Canon D350 and my laptop and if so how? I have some interesting construction work outside my window and it might be interesting to film in timelapse. I believe that I have to use the Zoombrowser EX software (I have version 5.1 that can with the camera) but I've no idea how to link and operate it to take pictures throughout the day. A brief walkthrough would be greatly appreciated.

Cheers

Gazzaa.
 
I tried it once, I think it was really fiddly and gave up as I couldn't get it to work properly. To connect the camera to the laptop though you can use the standard USB cable.

Another option is to get a wired remote, you can get them off of ebay for a few pounds and they let you set the interval and number of shots, I don't know if you can use them for exposures of less than a second though.
 
No I can't get my Canon D350 to work remotely I assume that I need a better camera to do this. In addition I can't seem to find a remote intervalometer that will work with the Canon D350 is such a device available?
 
Is there not a remote that has this facility. IIRC the old EOS 10 35mm had this facility built in but you were obviously restricted by the film size.
I am sure in these days of advanced computer circuitry it would be simple to add it to the many features already installed.
 
With the 40d you have to use EOS utility and timer interval shooting in the remote shooting section.
 
No I can't get my Canon D350 to work remotely I assume that I need a better camera to do this. In addition I can't seem to find a remote intervalometer that will work with the Canon D350 is such a device available?

I couldn't get my 400D to work for a while either, just persevere with the software and eventually you may get it to work.

Just type in 350D remote timer on ebay, there's loads if them, such as this one.

Is there not a remote that has this facility. IIRC the old EOS 10 35mm had this facility built in but you were obviously restricted by the film size.
I am sure in these days of advanced computer circuitry it would be simple to add it to the many features already installed.

No for some reason most/all Canon DSLR's don't have this function.


That looks pretty much the same as the canon software which comes free.:)
 
Pretty much the same yes, I wasnt aware the Canon software had automatic interval shooting, if it does then DSLR Remote Pro would be pretty pointless :)
 
Cheers Amp34 I'm going to download all the latest software and drivers and give a determined effort this time. Will let you know if it works and if so how.
 
Should be pretty simple with the Canon software - updated mine last night and had a look, basically one setting and a bit of tweaking to get the focus right (which you can do in Live View on the computer if need be) then let it run plugged into the laptop
 
Reason I wasn't able to make it work the first time round was incredibly simple in the end. Just in case anyone else needs to know and are having the same issues with a Canon camera this may help.

Answer: Before connecting the camera to the PC, on the camera press "Menu" the go to "Setup Menu 2" down to "Communication" press "SET" then select "PC connection". That it DONE!! Uploading the latest drivers and software may or may not help but why not.
 
Just type in 350D remote timer on ebay, there's loads if them, such as this one.


:agree:

Got one for my 40D - put me back about £35 including postage across the world. Really simple to use as you just plug it in the remote shutter release hole, no need for the laptop. You set the timer and interval between pictures on the remote timer (mine will take up to 400 shots on any settings). Set the camera to P or Av and let the camera take care of exposure.

Don't know how fast or slow you want your timelapse to be. Main thing is can allow your camera to go to sleep between pictures (the timer will wake it up for the photo), so if you shot one pic a day battery and card would last for months.

Alternatively, one shot every 4 minutes on my timer would cover an entire day and night (don't sleep in the same room). Then each morning you'd could press the stop/start button on the timer to make it take the next 400 photos. Or do one shot every 1.5 minutes to cover 10 hours around working day and daylight - then restart it each morning! :thumbs:
At that rate you'll need to change battery every three days or so - and either shoot JPEG or be downloading cards every day too.

What I've done to make a movie with the pictures is use slideshow software - most have a free trial download (I use slideshow gold). Using small JPEGs (1000 pixels longest side) the slideshow will easily cope with showing the pics at 0.1 seconds each and no effects (most have 3 second fade set as default) and it looks like a movie. One day of 400 pictures would last 40 seconds! You can even make a little .exe file out of it to fit on a memory key or email to show friends.

Hope that helps.

Sue
 
:agree:

Got one for my 40D - put me back about £35 including postage across the world. Really simple to use as you just plug it in the remote shutter release hole, no need for the laptop. You set the timer and interval between pictures on the remote timer (mine will take up to 400 shots on any settings). Set the camera to P or Av and let the camera take care of exposure.

Don't know how fast or slow you want your timelapse to be. Main thing is can allow your camera to go to sleep between pictures (the timer will wake it up for the photo), so if you shot one pic a day battery and card would last for months.

Alternatively, one shot every 4 minutes on my timer would cover an entire day and night (don't sleep in the same room). Then each morning you'd could press the stop/start button on the timer to make it take the next 400 photos. Or do one shot every 1.5 minutes to cover 10 hours around working day and daylight - then restart it each morning! :thumbs:
At that rate you'll need to change battery every three days or so - and either shoot JPEG or be downloading cards every day too.

What I've done to make a movie with the pictures is use slideshow software - most have a free trial download (I use slideshow gold). Using small JPEGs (1000 pixels longest side) the slideshow will easily cope with showing the pics at 0.1 seconds each and no effects (most have 3 second fade set as default) and it looks like a movie. One day of 400 pictures would last 40 seconds! You can even make a little .exe file out of it to fit on a memory key or email to show friends.

Hope that helps.

Sue

Hi Sue
Is that the one from HK supplies? the TR 90 C8?

Paul
 
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