Such great timing... I was out shooting a night lapse the same night in the mountains. Didn't turn out perfect, had some flickering, pumped to learn form this one.
Aidin, I feel like we have the same hair but you have managed to master the art of the wave. I on the other hand struggled trying to style mine for years and have reluctantly settled for a hat most of the time. What I'm trying to say is.... your videos impress me, but your hair confidence is what got me to subscribe ;)
Hey Aidin! I'm using a Lumix G7 as my regular cam and I have 2 quick questions: 1) What cheap lense would you recommend I use with my G7, just in general? 2) What good Micro 4/3 to EF adapter would you recommend? Thanks ahead if you answer my questions, and regardless, thanks for the video! It was very helpful!!!!
My Garmin watch has the moon phase, rise and set time for that night, you can also scroll through to see any other night too, super useful for night photography
Hi, thanks for the tips. In LR, why don't you use gradient filter to adjust/edit the sky and the ground/foreground separately (i.e clarity, texture, so on)? since, your camera doesn't move, you can still copy paste parameters.
If you're by a car you could use a Goal Zero Yeti and film a time lapse for probably a month (probably literally a month depending on which Yeti), I don't know, just a crazy idea I had. For my mobile guitar effects rig I use an Aukey USB C 20,000 mAh power bank hooked to a Mission Engineering Power 529 USB converter which my effects pedals are plugged into. I wonder if I can use the Aukey with cameras
Unfortunately, for the purpose of shooting in darkness, I live in NYC where we never see the stars. I'll have to travel upstate or something to do this.
There are several dark sky apps, tell you where to go. I live in a brightly lit suburban area in the central valley of California and I have to go about 30 miles east to get to a dark sky area.
Nice video for beginners, my only disagreement is if you don’t wanna get star trailing and you want pinpoint bright stars, you should shoot under 20 seconds
great video man! This is super helpful! Could you make a video about your current gear and what camera you are using right now? That would be super cool!
Aidin has the best titles / motion graphics ever. period. The text is so satistfying and it fits so well into the footage. I love how your white text fits into dark footage and the blavk text fits into the light footage. The text feels so meaningful. Btw, I always wanted to ask you this, how old are you? You're like a mentor for me. So I'm really curious
good tutorial, but I have one question.....I shoot with my d750 and 28mm lens at 2.8.....I set my external intervallometer at 13sec and 25sec interval between photos.....my question is : on the camera should I put in BULB....ISO 200-400. CORRECT ????
very well explained in an easy-to-understand manner. thanks. now to answer the big question- how much space am i going to need if i will be shooting all night- say 8 hours- that too in raw mode?
I’ve been looking at a lot of these night videos but one thing that I don’t ever hear about is the focus point. I’d assume our focus point would be the sky; how did you get such clarity from the stars but also have the tree in focus if you’re shooting at that low of an aperture
I do a lot of nighttime timelapse. Focus is one the the things you absolutely must get right. Super frustrating if you don't. You will be using manual focus. That's a given. You can do one, maybe all of the following: Point the camera at the brightest object in the sky, lock up the tripod and focus on that star. Take a photo, check the result using the preview to magnify the image in the screen. Repeat until you are happy with the result. If your lens is a zoom, then crank up the zoom and take test shots. Don't forget to pull the zoom back when ready to start shooting. If your camera has live-view, turn it on and again, point at the brightest object in the sky. Use the zoom feature of the live-view to zoom in and set the focus. Don't try looking for stars in 'zoom' mode, it's a lot harder to find any. Find a bright star and then zoom, then focus. Some cameras have a nighttime focus-assist. Not used them myself but they look pretty cool. If an object on the ground, like that tree AND, is far enough away for infinity focus then by all means use that. Not so easy at night. Do take your time. Small, dim objects are even smaller and dimmer in a wide angle lens. You may already know this but, in case you don't: 'Infinity' on a lens is just short of the infinity mark on the lens barrel and they all seem to be slightly different. Hope this helps.
Another absolutely excellent tutorial so well demonstrated! I particularly liked the section about camera settings and why. Thanks again Aidin for such a great job.
Well done! Any chance in the future you could show how to do a night to day or day to night? I thought I knew what I was doing once and failed miserably at a night to day...
Really like your videos and teaching methods. you have some nice equipment. I am starting with a GoPro to get better at my videography / photography and am curious if you have used a GoPro or just use the Canon EOS and Lumix G7?
Whoa thanks Aidin for the tutorial. Shooting mine next week. Question: if my shutterspeed is 20 seconds, should my interval be 40 seconds? That would mean if I want to have a 15s video, it’s gonna take me about 4 hours right? (video is 25fps)
That looks like the Blue Ridge Parkway? If so, I'll be on it starting Sunday on my way to Asheville. Where about was that shot? Looks like a great location. And great video, byw.
Is is possible to create a night time lap for video with the Panasonic Lumic ZS100? its a point and shoot. I haven't found in-depth videos about this camera.
I can't fathom the amount of effort that was put into filming videos where you speak in nature and the lighting on your face looks great.
Best 22 min 7 sec I've ever spent learning something
7:00 -8:30 music is soo beautiful and relaxing! Never thought music bed was that good! Might check em out!
Bruh if it wasnt for the sfx i would have gone with Musicbed
Love that you Drive the manual Acura/Honda. Nice to see that young generation still drives manuals.
When Aidin reads your mind and delivers a video about what you were discussing just. Last. Night *\0/* thank you!
Pretty much. I hope he didn't pay
attention to the other thoughts :D
I HAVE BEEN WAITING FOR THIS....
Hope it delivers!
I know almost nothing about photography, but you make it so amazing and breathtaking! Aidin, thank you so much for making my week a little better!
the sky looks so so so beautiful!
the overall aesthetic of your vids is insane + its actually helpful, you're awesome
These actually take so much more skill than people think.
All your shots are so good!
Such great timing... I was out shooting a night lapse the same night in the mountains. Didn't turn out perfect, had some flickering, pumped to learn form this one.
Aidin, I feel like we have the same hair but you have managed to master the art of the wave. I on the other hand struggled trying to style mine for years and have reluctantly settled for a hat most of the time. What I'm trying to say is.... your videos impress me, but your hair confidence is what got me to subscribe ;)
You might add a lens warmer to prevent fogging of the lens . Always good to check k the dew point on the night you are shooting
Appreciated brother. Keep up the great work.We appreciate it. Its a 'MOVEMENT'
very help ful as begineer in timelapse photography
The intro was an absolute stunner! 🧡
Great video my dude🫡🫡 I’m an amateur just sampling some timelapses when I camp (6000 feet) best I’ve seen. Thank you
Спасибо, как раз хотели попробовать заснять ночное небо)
Hey Aidin!
I'm using a Lumix G7 as my regular cam and I have 2 quick questions:
1) What cheap lense would you recommend I use with my G7, just in general?
2) What good Micro 4/3 to EF adapter would you recommend?
Thanks ahead if you answer my questions, and regardless, thanks for the video! It was very helpful!!!!
Lume cubes or whatever seem amazing really need to look into these for my astrophotography
My Garmin watch has the moon phase, rise and set time for that night, you can also scroll through to see any other night too, super useful for night photography
What a man such a great tutorial
Plz do like this more
Why you stop like this tutorial
I Always Learn New Things From Your Videos. Thank You So Much For Teaching Us❤️❤️
This is the most informative video on TH-cam. Thank you!
love that you take so much effort to present you art .love from india
Merci magnifique again! I wake up this morning and i see that crazy sky here in france, and 10 min later i find your new video!
Trop Cool!
Hi, thanks for the tips. In LR, why don't you use gradient filter to adjust/edit the sky and the ground/foreground separately (i.e clarity, texture, so on)? since, your camera doesn't move, you can still copy paste parameters.
Thanks Aidin❤️
king aidin
Great work! Is there a follow up video on editing the timelapse on Premier Pro?
I think this is the first time I’ve seen you make a tutorial with the sunset. It looks amazing
Great communication skills!
Your channel still one of the bests of filmmaking. Awesome tutorial. Thank you so much!
My man out there reading minds !!!
Dude I'm in a zoom class... Aidin's video is more educational for me 🤣
Hope my parents don't see this... 😬
fact.
Bruh same here
LOL!
@@RoccoGermani only true fans watch Aidins video before anything else 👀
@@itsprestonchen yessirrrrr
If you're by a car you could use a Goal Zero Yeti and film a time lapse for probably a month (probably literally a month depending on which Yeti), I don't know, just a crazy idea I had.
For my mobile guitar effects rig I use an Aukey USB C 20,000 mAh power bank hooked to a Mission Engineering Power 529 USB converter which my effects pedals are plugged into. I wonder if I can use the Aukey with cameras
Awesome vid! Timelapses are so nice!
Thanksss Aidinss!
Finally got my TH-cam notif about tutorial for time lapse 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Thanks for the education bro
Thank you for all of the knowledge you shared in this video, it really helped! Much love, Ody
I like your videos I am also a tiny youtuber or filmmaker!!
Unfortunately, for the purpose of shooting in darkness, I live in NYC where we never see the stars. I'll have to travel upstate or something to do this.
There are several dark sky apps, tell you where to go. I live in a brightly lit suburban area in the central valley of California and I have to go about 30 miles east to get to a dark sky area.
Nice video for beginners, my only disagreement is if you don’t wanna get star trailing and you want pinpoint bright stars, you should shoot under 20 seconds
great video man! This is super helpful! Could you make a video about your current gear and what camera you are using right now? That would be super cool!
Watching this video and hoping i can do it on my Galaxy S10+. Great educational video!
I was literally thinking today about wanting to do this (wanting a tutorial), so that's nice.
Would love to see a video of how you come up with short film ideas!
These intros are... So so good!!! Thanks for the tutorial! I've been trying these out with my R6 and its built in intervalometer. 💯
Absolutely killer mate!! Like always :)
awesome video broski
a night sky photographer based in South Carolina? much respect! (I've lived in Atlanta and Asheville.. Denver now)
Aidin has the best titles / motion graphics ever. period.
The text is so satistfying and it fits so well into the footage.
I love how your white text fits into dark footage and the blavk text fits into the light footage. The text feels so meaningful.
Btw, I always wanted to ask you this, how old are you? You're like a mentor for me. So I'm really curious
Why youtube always recommend me great video its a perfect video I want
good tutorial, but I have one question.....I shoot with my d750 and 28mm lens at 2.8.....I set my external intervallometer at 13sec and 25sec interval between photos.....my question is : on the camera should I put in BULB....ISO 200-400. CORRECT ????
nice vid! - really wish canon has better intervalometers. it makes things so much easier... I have the R as well.
Thank you aidin
Thanks u Aidin😄
very well explained in an easy-to-understand manner. thanks. now to answer the big question- how much space am i going to need if i will be shooting all night- say 8 hours- that too in raw mode?
I’ve been looking at a lot of these night videos but one thing that I don’t ever hear about is the focus point. I’d assume our focus point would be the sky; how did you get such clarity from the stars but also have the tree in focus if you’re shooting at that low of an aperture
I do a lot of nighttime timelapse. Focus is one the the things you absolutely must get right. Super frustrating if you don't.
You will be using manual focus. That's a given. You can do one, maybe all of the following:
Point the camera at the brightest object in the sky, lock up the tripod and focus on that star. Take a photo, check the result using the preview to magnify the image in the screen. Repeat until you are happy with the result.
If your lens is a zoom, then crank up the zoom and take test shots. Don't forget to pull the zoom back when ready to start shooting.
If your camera has live-view, turn it on and again, point at the brightest object in the sky. Use the zoom feature of the live-view to zoom in and set the focus. Don't try looking for stars in 'zoom' mode, it's a lot harder to find any. Find a bright star and then zoom, then focus.
Some cameras have a nighttime focus-assist. Not used them myself but they look pretty cool.
If an object on the ground, like that tree AND, is far enough away for infinity focus then by all means use that. Not so easy at night.
Do take your time. Small, dim objects are even smaller and dimmer in a wide angle lens.
You may already know this but, in case you don't: 'Infinity' on a lens is just short of the infinity mark on the lens barrel and they all seem to be slightly different.
Hope this helps.
Absolutely love the effort you put into these videos !
Thank you Aidin. Taking the chance to wish you a Merry Christhmas from Palma de Mallorca.
Perfect🔥just what I wanted
Awesome tips Aidin! I tried a nightlapse a couple of months ago and it was an epic fail 😂😂😂 I'll try with your tips next time
Thanks For this
Great video thanks, just suggestion of a shorter exposure than 60 seconds as you get star trailing.
I loved the video. I'm now actually tempted to go out and try this out. Thx and keep up the awesome work!
Have you done any time lapse tutorials on moon setting ? So when the light is going from bright to dark ? Thanks.
Perfect timing for me. Yaaaah
Great video! What size SD card/ storage do you recommend for this sort of shoot?
Very nice intro. You always deliver high quality and inspiring work. Gracias
Excellent Video, for the Day to Nigth timelapse my biggest problem, is the adjustment of the camera, with the aperture and Shutter speed. any tips?
Another absolutely excellent tutorial so well demonstrated! I particularly liked the section about camera settings and why. Thanks again Aidin for such a great job.
Great Video, Loved it and I can't believe you think the carolinas look basic the views and nightlapses look sick
Super nice explained and very educational! Must try this on one of my next videos :)
Very informative...but also extremely well shot! Really enjoyed those B-Roll clips in the middle of this video. 8:07
How the hell do you have such crisp audio outdoors? Insane, kudos.
LOVE IT thank u
Did you know the PhotoPills app also has an npf rule calculator?
Well done! Any chance in the future you could show how to do a night to day or day to night? I thought I knew what I was doing once and failed miserably at a night to day...
Do you add any extra protection to the camera to protect it from the morning dew?
Really like your videos and teaching methods. you have some nice equipment. I am starting with a GoPro to get better at my videography / photography and am curious if you have used a GoPro or just use the Canon EOS and Lumix G7?
Cool stuff...
Is it better to use video mode or photo mode for timelapse?
It's very useful
Very helpful thank you!
Whoa thanks Aidin for the tutorial. Shooting mine next week. Question: if my shutterspeed is 20 seconds, should my interval be 40 seconds? That would mean if I want to have a 15s video, it’s gonna take me about 4 hours right? (video is 25fps)
Nice video, very helpful. One thing to add is using manual focus is important during these types of shoots.
Nice tutorial!
What settings did you have for this pictures with G7 and 11mm 2.8 ?
Aidin.. As always awesome :)
Thanks for your tutorials I really love and appreciate them
That looks like the Blue Ridge Parkway? If so, I'll be on it starting Sunday on my way to Asheville. Where about was that shot? Looks like a great location. And great video, byw.
Is is possible to create a night time lap for video with the Panasonic Lumic ZS100? its a point and shoot. I haven't found in-depth videos about this camera.
Cool!✌️
nice as always, btw just a quick one, would love to see how you mount your camera for the in car talking shots from the side :)
Can you do a cloud ☁️ time lapse from sunrise to sunset ???
Dziękuję, bardzo dobre filmy
Can you provide buy link to the f2.8 lens you used?
I love this. Would you like to make how to shoot milky way??
That's exactly what this video is?
@@AidinRobbins i mean not just a star . Add some like astronomy milkyway galaxy
Did you shoot in aperture mode or manual
Loved it, just followed your advice for my first Nightlapse and currently editing it. It's coming up very nicely, thanks Aidin!
Let's gooooo glad that I could help out!
@@AidinRobbins Your tips definitely helped a lot mate, here's the result just published today:
th-cam.com/video/uRADDWD4DBI/w-d-xo.html
What is the little tripod you use for the light?
Nice buddy