The first thing I have done is taken out the images obscured by rain or condensation fog. In fact, that's all I've done so far... there are various processing measures I can take to improve the results, but as it involves a fair amount of manual labour I have opted to post the interim 'rough' version, not least so the gardeners and volunteers at Tyntesfield are able to see it.
I live on the Tyntesfield National Trust Estate and I am a keen naturalist, filmmaker and photographer. Through this blog, I hope to show a series of moments in the lives of the wildlife, big and small, that live here on the Estate with me.
Monday, 18 April 2016
2015 Kitchen Garden time-lapse
In February 2015 I installed a solar powered time-lapse camera in the kitchen garden at Tyntesfield. Programmed to take 4 pictures a day, it ran until the end of September when the battery ran out of sun and steam.
The first thing I have done is taken out the images obscured by rain or condensation fog. In fact, that's all I've done so far... there are various processing measures I can take to improve the results, but as it involves a fair amount of manual labour I have opted to post the interim 'rough' version, not least so the gardeners and volunteers at Tyntesfield are able to see it.
The first thing I have done is taken out the images obscured by rain or condensation fog. In fact, that's all I've done so far... there are various processing measures I can take to improve the results, but as it involves a fair amount of manual labour I have opted to post the interim 'rough' version, not least so the gardeners and volunteers at Tyntesfield are able to see it.
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