Video Creator Makes The ‘World’s First Talking Timelapse’

A video creator has claimed to have made the world’s first speaking timelapse. Shot over virtually a 12 months, the person could be seen talking a sentence whereas his hair grows longer

The nameless creator identified solely as “Lotrfan” made the spectacular video filmed over 285 days and synced up his mouth talking utilizing enhancing software program.

“I took a photograph of myself daily for 285 days and lined them up with a pre-existing video of me speaking,” he explains within the YouTube description.

“Hey guys, I’ve developed a medical situation which causes my hair to develop extraordinarily quick. Like and subscribe,” he says within the timelapse video.

“And for the love of god that is excruciatingly painful,” he provides.

talking timelapse
The video creator explains on the finish how he made the video with a side-by-side comparability.

On the finish of his YouTube video, the person explains how he made the speaking timelapse.

“This was achieved by taking the supply footage and breaking it into particular person photographs,” the Lord of the Rings fan explains.

“Then utilizing a transparency program on Home windows, Glass2k, to make my webcam app clear allowed me to line up the shot with the corresponding body from the supply picture.”

He posted it to Reddit the place it acquired a heat reception. “That is actually cool, good work!” Writes one Redditor.

“That is wonderful and I like the face you added in a mini how-to on the finish. As a video producer at a college I want I may provide you with one thing this cool.”

Lotrfan joked that he began the mission after his barber elevated the price of a haircut from $20 to $35 and “I used to be considering of options.”

Methods to Make a Timelapse Video

In PetaPixel’s guide, Alexander J.E. Bradley explains {that a} video is made up from 25 single photographs per second, and when positioned back-to-back, it tips our thoughts into seeing movement.

However after we take one picture each minute after which play it again at 25 frames per second it ends in an impressive hyper-realistic compression of time.

After all, Lotrfan took a photograph daily after which compressed 285 frames into simply 9 seconds — making time go even quicker.

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