This course was originally released under the name "Introduction to Timelapse Photography" on my website. I decided to share it here for free as well! But don't forget to check my other timelapse courses for more in-depth lessons :) emerictimelapse.com/courses
Amazing! If I well understood... when you finished to calculate intermediate auto transitions from the keyframes so, you update metadata in the raw files directly with LRTimelapse and without exporting them in jpeg. At this point when you will use raw files in Aftereffect to create the video clip Aftereffect will use the edited raw files instead of the originals. The final clip will be created with all colour correctioslns made in Lightroom, correct?
I have a question about shutter speed being 2 or 3 seconds apart from interval, but I'm not sure how to word it correctly. I watched another 'how-to' video and that person mentioned when your timelapse gets darkened from cloud coverage or a sunset, and you have to manually tweak the shutter speed to allow more light in, it can mess everything up and miss shots. They will eventually be way off from each other. Or is that easily fixable with the free downloadable version of LR Timelapse?
Indeed you can't have a shutter speed longer than your interval or that will be an issue. If your subject gets darker, you can also play with aperture and ISO if needed. I recommend watching my day to night video to understand exposure ramping and changing camera settings ua-cam.com/video/RI-73SQfXNE/v-deo.html
@@EmericTimelapse the link you sent was the video I first watched before this one. But I found out I can't manually change the shutter speed while in a timelapse with my camera in manual. Nothing happens. I can in normal video mode though. I hope an intervalometer solves my problems for the most part.
Are you using a built-in intervalometer? It might be the issue. Try getting an external one to see if you can change the settings. I've heard this issue before and it was because of the internal intervalometer.
Canon R6 Mark II RAW files are in .CR3 format. This format is not supported in Adobe Premiere Pro. Is there a way to import it? Or should I rather move to some other video editing software to make to actual video sequence?
@@EmericTimelapseI converted the images to DNG but Premiere errors out saying Unsupported format or damaged file. I used Adobe DNG Converter program to convert the images.
Hmm could be coming from Premiere? Is it a cracked or paid version? Try with After Effects. I feel like it's coming from the software, I am pretty sure CR3 are readable on Adobe softwares, been around for a long time!
thank you very much for great video! I have to comment on one technical thing though...I am quite impressed how fast does your timeline in AE load, even in full. What computer did you use? I am asking, because my workflow was following - I have exported my NEF files (Nikon RAW) files from Lightroom into 16 Bit Tiff files and converted them in AE into 6K PRORES 4444 video. The problem is, that my timeline does not get loaded like yours...it takes me ages to load it, even in quarter resolution and it is basically unusable, because it loads again and again after each edit. I thought, my older win desktop is simply not powerful enough and tested it on my friends Apple Mac Studio with M1 max chip and 32 GB RAM, but the results were literally the same even in quarter resolution. Now I am not sure where could be the problem, because most M1/M2 reviews here on YT say, that these machines handle even 8K PRORES videos like a charm...so I am quite confused...I might try to skip conversion into tiff files and create convert NEF files into PRORES 4444 video and see what happens.
Not sure where the issue could be, maybe AE? I usually work with 4K+ files in ProRes 4444 and it works fine. I have only 16GB of ram and still on intel processor from 2019 haha Why don't you just create a proxy for that file? Just create a H264 or ProRes 422 with same resolution, work on your file, then replace the footage when done before exporting (Right click in the project panel > Replace footage).
@@EmericTimelapse thank you so much for your response. I have already started to check how to use proxies and I will try it for sure👍 it is definitely a stranfe behaviout that m1 max has trouble with that🤨 Cheers and thanks again for your help👍
@@EmericTimelapse maybe one more technical question...I had a discussion on Reddit and few people stated, that I should try Premiere Pro and the timeline performance is WAY WAY better! BUT, now the technical question (since I am complete noob to compare Premiere pro/After effects) - is there any reason for using After Effects and not Premiere Pro? I think, Warp stabilizer together with cleaning tools is present also in Premiere Pro...or am I completely wrong/missing something? thank you!
This course was originally released under the name "Introduction to Timelapse Photography" on my website. I decided to share it here for free as well!
But don't forget to check my other timelapse courses for more in-depth lessons :) emerictimelapse.com/courses
Brilliant Emeric. Thanks...im ready to dive in
Have fun!
Un grand merci pour cette magnifique formation ! 🫶
Thanks sir very interesting
Such a great content. Thank you so much for it
Glad you enjoy it!
This is SO great!! Thank you!
Glad you like it!
Thank you, bro, you are the genius
Welcome 👍
Amazing! If I well understood... when you finished to calculate intermediate auto transitions from the keyframes so, you update metadata in the raw files directly with LRTimelapse and without exporting them in jpeg. At this point when you will use raw files in Aftereffect to create the video clip Aftereffect will use the edited raw files instead of the originals. The final clip will be created with all colour correctioslns made in Lightroom, correct?
Correct! It’s all thanks to Adobe Camera Raw and the XMP metadata that you can read on all Adobe programs!
@@EmericTimelapse Thank you very much for your availability and my compliments for your beautiful works 👍🏻🙂
SO great!! Thank you!
My pleasure!!
Yet to watch the whole video. But thanks already Emeric ❤️🙌🏼
My pleasure!
I have a question about shutter speed being 2 or 3 seconds apart from interval, but I'm not sure how to word it correctly. I watched another 'how-to' video and that person mentioned when your timelapse gets darkened from cloud coverage or a sunset, and you have to manually tweak the shutter speed to allow more light in, it can mess everything up and miss shots. They will eventually be way off from each other. Or is that easily fixable with the free downloadable version of LR Timelapse?
Indeed you can't have a shutter speed longer than your interval or that will be an issue. If your subject gets darker, you can also play with aperture and ISO if needed. I recommend watching my day to night video to understand exposure ramping and changing camera settings ua-cam.com/video/RI-73SQfXNE/v-deo.html
@@EmericTimelapse the link you sent was the video I first watched before this one. But I found out I can't manually change the shutter speed while in a timelapse with my camera in manual. Nothing happens. I can in normal video mode though. I hope an intervalometer solves my problems for the most part.
Are you using a built-in intervalometer? It might be the issue. Try getting an external one to see if you can change the settings. I've heard this issue before and it was because of the internal intervalometer.
Canon R6 Mark II RAW files are in .CR3 format. This format is not supported in Adobe Premiere Pro. Is there a way to import it? Or should I rather move to some other video editing software to make to actual video sequence?
Just use LRTimelapse and Lightroom or convert your CR3 to DNG before importing on Premiere!
@@EmericTimelapseI converted the images to DNG but Premiere errors out saying Unsupported format or damaged file. I used Adobe DNG Converter program to convert the images.
Hmm could be coming from Premiere? Is it a cracked or paid version? Try with After Effects. I feel like it's coming from the software, I am pretty sure CR3 are readable on Adobe softwares, been around for a long time!
Make sure you are up to date with Adobe Camera Raw too!
thank you very much for great video!
I have to comment on one technical thing though...I am quite impressed how fast does your timeline in AE load, even in full. What computer did you use? I am asking, because my workflow was following - I have exported my NEF files (Nikon RAW) files from Lightroom into 16 Bit Tiff files and converted them in AE into 6K PRORES 4444 video. The problem is, that my timeline does not get loaded like yours...it takes me ages to load it, even in quarter resolution and it is basically unusable, because it loads again and again after each edit. I thought, my older win desktop is simply not powerful enough and tested it on my friends Apple Mac Studio with M1 max chip and 32 GB RAM, but the results were literally the same even in quarter resolution. Now I am not sure where could be the problem, because most M1/M2 reviews here on YT say, that these machines handle even 8K PRORES videos like a charm...so I am quite confused...I might try to skip conversion into tiff files and create convert NEF files into PRORES 4444 video and see what happens.
Not sure where the issue could be, maybe AE? I usually work with 4K+ files in ProRes 4444 and it works fine. I have only 16GB of ram and still on intel processor from 2019 haha Why don't you just create a proxy for that file? Just create a H264 or ProRes 422 with same resolution, work on your file, then replace the footage when done before exporting (Right click in the project panel > Replace footage).
@@EmericTimelapse thank you so much for your response. I have already started to check how to use proxies and I will try it for sure👍 it is definitely a stranfe behaviout that m1 max has trouble with that🤨
Cheers and thanks again for your help👍
@@EmericTimelapse maybe one more technical question...I had a discussion on Reddit and few people stated, that I should try Premiere Pro and the timeline performance is WAY WAY better! BUT, now the technical question (since I am complete noob to compare Premiere pro/After effects) - is there any reason for using After Effects and not Premiere Pro? I think, Warp stabilizer together with cleaning tools is present also in Premiere Pro...or am I completely wrong/missing something? thank you!
For my Sony a7R IV 61MPix sensor 2 hours of 7 interval sequence takes 158 GB 😅
Yeah that’s a lot haha I think anything around 30-40MP is ideal for timelapses!