Waterfall time-lapse/Slow motion near my home

Slippertalk Orchid Forum

Help Support Slippertalk Orchid Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

KyushuCalanthe

Just call me Tom
Joined
Jan 12, 2008
Messages
8,280
Reaction score
585
Location
Kyushu, Japan; warm temperate/subtropical climate
This one is just for fun, though there is one orchid in there towards the end. Also, keep an eye out for a tree snail at 1:38. First time trying a true time-lapse, not perfect, but not bad.

Waterfall Time-lapse/Slow Motion

WaterfallBB_zpscyaeutx2.jpeg
 
It's a Sedum, perhaps S. sarmentosum, a naturalized plant originally from Korea and China, so is practically a native. It is common to see them growing along roadsides or on rocks where there is ample water.

The leaves are broad, not succulent like "Sedum." Is this the orchid you mentioned at the top of the post?
 
Beautiful and very relaxing. I especially liked the slow motion clouds moving over the mountain.

Susan
 
The leaves are broad, not succulent like "Sedum." Is this the orchid you mentioned at the top of the post?

Sorry, brain fart, thought you meant at the beginning. Yes, in the description I mentioned a few plants, that being one. It is Cephalanthera falcata, the "golden orchid". I wrote an article about it in my blog if you'd like more info.

The little plant with yellow flowers at around 12 seconds in (you may have to strain your eyes on a small screen) is the sedum.
 
Gorgeous! I can stare at waterfalls for hours! The little yellow orchid. I forget what they call it, but it is cute! Oh you just said it in the post above me^^^
 
Sorry, brain fart, thought you meant at the beginning. Yes, in the description I mentioned a few plants, that being one. It is Cephalanthera falcata, the "golden orchid". I wrote an article about it in my blog if you'd like more info.

Thanks! Such a shame they need symbiotic soil fungi to survive. Maybe cross breed with european helleborine for yellow easy to grow terrestrial orchids?

http://botanyboy.org/two-helleborine-orchids-from-japan-genus-cephalanthera/
 
This is so beautiful. I find this kind of work very interesting and what you have done here is so nice!!

How, how, how did you PAN and time lapse at the same time?


I'm going to go into full critique mode now because this is exactly what I would appreciate people to do for my videos (YouTube: my green pets).

The music was very interesting combined with the scenery because one would expect some kind of traditional Japanese music to accompany this. It kind of separated the scenery from the human cultural element for me in spite of the little butsus, which I really enjoyed.

There were some scenes that I felt could have used a few more seconds and others fewer. That's a challenge I face in my own videos, timing etc.

I think the order of scenes could have been rearranged to tell more of a story, if that makes any sense. It did seem a bit random. Perhaps starting with some wide shots kind of setting up the scene, then more specific and more detailed shots, then maybe some final wide shots again to wrap it all up.

I have been venturing into this type of video making myself recently with the objective of simply portraying the beauty of the world around me.

This has been really inspiring, thank you.
 
Thanks! Such a shame they need symbiotic soil fungi to survive. Maybe cross breed with european helleborine for yellow easy to grow terrestrial orchids?

http://botanyboy.org/two-helleborine-orchids-from-japan-genus-cephalanthera/

Hmm, I don't know if a cross between those two genera would work - probably. Some Epipactis are quite growable, others are like Cephalanthera, fungi dependent. The Japanese native E. thunbergii has a yellow morph flower that might make an interesting cross with this species.

This is so beautiful. I find this kind of work very interesting and what you have done here is so nice!!

How, how, how did you PAN and time lapse at the same time?

I'm using Final Cut Pro X, a reasonably good software (iMovie is a joke by comparison). In that you can crop the frame or do what is called a "Ken Burn's effect" where you start the beginning of the clip at a certain crop and finish at a different location within the original frame. The effect is like a pan and really easy to do. Of course you need a lot of pixels to play with or the quality suffers a lot. That's why I shoot 4K.


I'm going to go into full critique mode now because this is exactly what I would appreciate people to do for my videos (YouTube: my green pets).

The music was very interesting combined with the scenery because one would expect some kind of traditional Japanese music to accompany this. It kind of separated the scenery from the human cultural element for me in spite of the little butsus, which I really enjoyed.

These locations are shrines that are assembled along mountain valleys right next to waterfalls. Those ropes over the waterfalls are of religious importance, sort of a message saying "god is in here". So, in my mind the whole thing is integrated.

I purposely stayed away from Japanese music in this one. After all, I could set every one of my videos to Japanese music since I live in Japan. This music seemed tranquil an contemplative - exactly how I feel in these places.

There were some scenes that I felt could have used a few more seconds and others fewer. That's a challenge I face in my own videos, timing etc.

I think the order of scenes could have been rearranged to tell more of a story, if that makes any sense. It did seem a bit random. Perhaps starting with some wide shots kind of setting up the scene, then more specific and more detailed shots, then maybe some final wide shots again to wrap it all up.

I wasn't looking for a finished product as such in this vid - it was more like an exploration using a technique I've not done before. Technically it is full of problems - the flickering light levels for instance which can be corrected, but it takes another step I didn't bother with. The music fit in remarkably well especially since I didn't really bother to time any of the sequences to the beats or variations of sound. So all in all, I'd say this attempt was just a happy accident where it came together.

I have been venturing into this type of video making myself recently with the objective of simply portraying the beauty of the world around me.

This has been really inspiring, thank you.

Glad to be of service to your work!
 

Latest posts

Back
Top