(New Timelaps can be found here • 1 Year timelaps 2.0 ) Made a one year timelapse back in 2014, this is a new one of year 2019. (Life of a carpark) 55216 pictures compiled into a clip. The music is from: • 30 min Gaming Mix / ...
Years after years after years ⌛⏳ Everything changes in the blink of an eye!! Life is short, we will leave and the traces will remain 🖐🏾✋🏿🤚🏽 And allah will remain alone ☝🏾🤲🏾
@@Auroral_Anomaly I can tell the direction of the sun by the shadows. It's true that it always goes from E to W, but in the southern hemisphere it goes via N, so it's R to L.
Amazing timelapse. Starts at Winter ❄️🥶. January month was full of cold. The sun comes and rises At 8:30. January month was going And going the sun was coming 7:30- At the last sun starts at 6:50.
I wish I could get this much snow and get a midnight sun so I wont get so uneasy on my self when its 2am except winter but since its night most of the day ill go more easy on my self since i have anxiety.
plz tell Me where this is taken.....as much consistent cloud coverage is exactly what I'm looking for wish to move to. This was a lot of fun to watch...thank you for sharing w/us...!
Really enjoyed the video. Made me up. The change of seasons in the Northern hemesphere is amazing. The summer is controvesed to the winter. I was amazed that in January it was like early spring. Respect!!!
No trust me you really REALLY don't. This latitude is FAR further north than here in Chicago but since the north american plain goes all the way up to the Arctic we get cold blasts that keep our winters colder than they should be at our latitude (similar to spain's) and combined with the lake effect from the great lakes we get a shit tom of snow (though the cold usually isnt extreme she to gulf air mixing with the Arctic air, and both get pushed away quickly by the jet stream - so weather is whacky and all over the place). In fact if it was colder here we'd get less snow, the canadian plains make it just cold enough to dump tons of snow here (though there are plenty of places that get magnitudes more so I can't complain). The US, especially the north and eastern parts have extremely variable weather and huge temp swings from season to season. Here in Illinois it's common to breach 100F (40ish? C) in the summer with stifling humidity and in winter we probably average 32F/0C and can hit temps well below that. It's when temps plunge below 0F that we start to get worried about dangerously cold conditions (but weather like that only occurs in bursts and only every few years or so). Sometimes I long for weather that is more stable, I've heard the UK has little variation from season to season. That sounds nice BUT idk if I'd like living in a geography that barely ever breaches 75-80F and is constantly rainy.
@@scenicdepictionsofchicagolife Contrary to popular belief, the UK does experience four seasons, albeit not as extreme as in the northern states. We can get very hot temperatures, hell, today it is 90F, which is very hot for September here, but temperatures like this happen every now and then throughout the summer. Winter is considerably milder than US winters, with temperatures never really going much below freezing (typically 20-25F is the lowest we'll see all winter), and only occasional snow. When snow DOES fall in this country in any significant quantity, the whole country shuts down basically, because we are not prepared for snow. Also, most places lack aircon, so when the weather does get hot there is literally no escaping it. Another myth is that it doesn't snow in the UK. It does snow pretty much every winter, but often only small quantities. Some years, we may see a significant snowfall in which several inches, or even close to a foot, falls. But this will only happen once or twice a year, if at all. Other than that, we may get the occasional morning snow which is gone by the afternoon. Our temperature swings are more temperate than US ones, but there definitely are four seasons here. The Gulf Stream keeps us warm over the winter and the proximity to the ocean acts as a temperature buffer. It's more that we have singular days of extremes (a few days of extreme heat or cold a year) rather than consistently extreme averages.
Amazing! I've watched the whole video in one setting. I so love projects like these. You took 1 picture per minute? I've noticed the seconds stayed at zero, hence my question. I also like that you left in the nights during the winter times and that the warmer seasons had no music gave these months a soothing look. Where was this taken? My guess is somewhere in America, but I didn't recognize the license plates on the car. This must have been a pretty tall building, isn't it? I'm asking because I think those stands around... may I guess seem like to be used by window washers, but of course they move too fast to be seen. I think that the 'dancing of the snow' on your windows was my favourite part. Especially when it hit so high!
I have a program called Blueiris and i have it configured to take 1 picture every 15min. The pause in music is cause of copyright claims even tho i tried my best to find copyright free music. I live in pretty much smack middle of Sweden and its taken from my kitchen window on the first floor, the scaffolding outside is is like 2m high and they are doing some repairs on a small balcony above our apartments entrance.
@@MiTTnick Thank you for answering. :) Haha, Sweden? Then I was so wrong with guessing it was America. Have you planned any other time-lapse projects for the future?
I have a newer one here ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-Op5zAjJLVsM.html. Havent planned anything major but just got a new motorized mount for astrophotography i might do some night time timelaps with, but i got that like a week ago so still trying to learn it, (its a Skywatcher EQ3 pro) and it have been really rainy and foggy at nights so havent been able todo anything yett, but later on this winter i plan of doing some timelaps of the night sky.
@@MiTTnick Nighttime time lapse! Yes, I hope you'll do that. You mean you will cut out the days and leave the nights? I wonder how the constallation would look like in your country from out of that building. I'll add your video to my Watch Later list - at night here projects like these will come out even better on the big screen.
There are many things that i like and I loved in winter ❄️🥶 January The sun comes at 7:30 or in 7:10 And the days ends in 4 p.m that Is very much early, in the last day of January 31 the sun,s twillight or Daylight comes at 6:50. And ends In 5:00 or 5:10 p.m Page 1 of January 1-31
0:01 - 10:13 Winter❄️⛄🐧 10:13 - 14:07 Spring🌷🌸🌹🌺🌻 14:07 - 22:22 Summer☀️⛱️🏖️ 22:22 29:03 - Autumn🍁🍂 If I made a mistake, I'm sorry, tell me what I did and I'll fix it.
Think you got it right, but it can change from year to year, some years we have snow long into may, and sometimes only untill end of february. But on average i would say you are correct. =)
0:00 Tres Reyes Magos 👑 3:42 Día Del Amor ❤ 10:53 Día De Los Niños 👶 11:50 Día De Las Madres 👩 15:41 Día De Los Papás 👨 28:32 Halloween 🎃 33:45 Navidad 🎄
To me, it seems somewhere between 58-62N. If it was above the Arctic Circle, there would be no light at all (or very little, if any) during the wintertime and a midnight sun for a lengthy portion of the summer.
Its in the middle of sweden. Using a TP-link NC450, taking a picture every 15 min i think, working on a new one right now but not sure when its will be done yett.