Awesome time lapse! I've started trying to do a little of this but I am using a quadcopter. My videos are very jumpy. Hopefully I can get some awesome shots similar to this!
I didn't read your Username before when I replied to this last year. I checked out your channel and realised who you were! I have your music in my playlists for car drives to hang gliding competitions where I spend all week looking around the clouds! So it's very fitting! I love that a few meteorologists and glider pilots are enjoying this background clip to your music.
I hope it's okay to ask if I may use a snippet or two from this for a music video I'm working on... I'm not monetized or partner, just a amateur musical youtuber! ...and yes, I'll list you in the credits!
Hey I am working on a movie with just timelapses but here in Indiana there isn’t nice weather for doing one of these, my GoPro won’t adjust to the light also. Do you mind if I use a ten second segment for my video I will put credits when the video plays and in the description , thank you for your help.
hi I just took a time lapse of clouds but out of the clouds going one direction there were two like small clouds going in a different direction and faster can anyone tell me if that's possible?
Hey Harrison, I work for french television for a tv series and I'd like very much to use this sky, unfortunately there is no 'description' where I can insert a link to your page since it's broadcasted on TV, and I have no right to add things in credits, could I use it anyway ?
Wow these clouds are very cool, this really displays the fact that the earth is indeed flat. How would the clouds move around a globe when they go from left to right? Thanks for the proof, great vids keep them up #earthisnotaglobe
hi! im new on all this... now I kind of believe earth is flat, ben thinking and meditating and observing a lot the sky this past week... I think I found out about a relatively simple experiment to prove or disprove earth is flat using clouds... you see, under a globe model when the clouds go to the horizon they should appear to be tilting perpendicularly to the edge of earth, so what we would see when they disappear on the horizon should be the same "flat under belly" we see when the go above us, but apparently we see one of their sides when they disappear, this may be due to the scale of the globe so we don't get to see that tilting effect, but it happens with boats on the shore, but not clouds? so I researched, most clouds are around 2 km high... so, if a friend who lives 30 km away from you tells you that the cloud you see at the "horizon" is above him, you have the horizontal distance and the height, so with basic trigonometry you can calculate the sen of the sides and know the angle of your eye to the cloud... under this example it would be 3,82°... almost the last of your eye sight angle (don't know how that works but I’m guessing its near the end of what you can see) so if you keep advancing the distance of said cloud to 40 km.. 50 km.. etc... you'll come up with 150 km and there's still 0.76° angle... so, what I want to do is with the help of friends in cities nearby try this experiment... then come to the conclusion of how can I see clouds that might be over 30, 50, 100 km.. when they're only 2 km high? Shouldn’t they tilt and disappear with the horizon? You could also do this experiment taking into account the speed of the cloud (air). Supposedly the horizon is at around 5km…
@@hrthrhs Hi Both, I have a new channel and do similar content. If interested, please view, like, subscribe- Much appreciated. ru-vid.com/show-UCQx5RBrr_sJV1LaDgpP4tzQ
Actually, not this time! I used a Nikon D600 with an interval timer for these images and stitched them with Windows movie maker after cropping them all in lightroom. Nowadays, phones can do it all much easier.