Edward Wolohan writes:
I wanted to share this photo with you I made from last night. It’s a 1hr 23min star trail, with a little light painting. The structure is an 18th century stone Pyramid, in the Old Kilbride cemetery in Arklow.
Edward Wolohan writes:
I wanted to share this photo with you I made from last night. It’s a 1hr 23min star trail, with a little light painting. The structure is an 18th century stone Pyramid, in the Old Kilbride cemetery in Arklow.
There’s the public service in Japan – taking a gaping five lane-wide sinkhole in a metropolitan area and fixing it in less than a week.
Above is a timelapse video of the entire engineering feat, capturing the around-the-clock work undertaken.
Action.
A time-lapse video of the Aurora Borealis and Milkyway caught in Donegal on August 24 and August 29 respectively.
Music by Dexter Britain.
By Noel Keating
Dramatic timelapse footage by BlueDog Films of a supercell thunderstorm off Australia’s Sunshine Coast on February 1st, 2016.
You may already be familiar with the productivity sapping Google Maps Streetview Player.
Input any two locations. Allow a little load time, then watch a timelapse-style journey (composed of stapled-together Streetview images) from one location to the other.
And that’s the rest of the afternoon sorted.
(H/T: Barry McKenna)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qo0fnK3na5g
The changing face of mankind, illustrated by Museum of the Earth paleo artist in residence John Gurche (that’s him, top right) visualised by Yale University Press.
Shaping Humanity: How Science, Art, and Imagination Help Us Understand Our Origins (John Gurche)
Controversial.
For the day that appears to be in it.
A touristy but eye-pleasing 60 second timelapse of some of London’s most iconic sights by British photographer Paul Richardson for Marriot International.
An extraordinary timelapse (shot at one second intervals) of a stationary supercell thunderstorm over the Black Hills of South Dakota near Rapid City on June 1, 2015 filmed by landscape photographer Nicolaus Wegner.
Go full screen for optimum effect.
A four minute complilation of timelapse footage from the International Space Station by Russian blogger Dmitri Pisankodes.