Went down to the lake for sunrise thinking at 2 degrees we might have a lot of misty smoke over the water. Not to be. So I changed plans and did some b-roll for our documentary, yes still working on it, The Sweetwater Seas. Sometimes what you go for isn't there in nature and you must change your perspective and reap the rewards of being in the right place at the right time because of your planning and serendipity! Enjoy!
Grosse Point Lighthouse Documentary
While we are still filming and editing the documentary The Sweetwater Seas – North America’s Great Lakes, we were asked by the Lighthouse Park District in Evanston to produce a short introductory film about the Grosse Point Lighthouse.
Because we live in Evanston and grew up on Lighthouse Beach, we were delighted to take on this project and help people know this amazing National Landmark. In these times of Covid-19, the Grosse Point Lighthouse has been closed to visitors, as is the case with all lighthouses on the Great Lakes. This film will inform people about the history of the lighthouse, show you portions of its interior and aerial views that not even the visitors get to enjoy.
Don Terras, the Director of Lighthouse Park District, gives us a great history of why it was built at Grosse Point, what the lighthouse keepers did and more.
Because we are just one mile from the landmark, Grosse Point Lighthouse and its adjacent beach has been one of the locations we have used extensively for filming, from shooting the weather in every season, sunsets, moonrises and more, to testing equipment.
We hope you enjoy this short film about the Grosse Point Lighthouse.
Cheers,
Richard & John
Grosse Point Lightstation
This short video is from a shoot we did early morning last week to fill in some footage for a section of The Sweetwater Seas - North America’s Great Lakes documentary. In this section we will talk about traveling around the Great Lakes, and as this footage captures, some of the lighthouses along the Great Lakes.
It was a cold morning after an unusual snowstorm on Halloween. The cold - around 25 degrees - and the early morning light made views of the top of the lighthouse very interesting with the frost on the glass. We also shot from the ground of the lighthouse and the waves. The sand was frozen already so our footsteps barely registered in the sand. The waves we beautiful in the morning light and we shot some slow motion clips of the waves as they rolled in.
Enjoy,
Richard Mack
Chicago Skyline Time-lapse
I did my first real test of the of the “holy grail” of time-lapse where you go from daylight to night-time (or the reverse). I used the Timelapse+ VIEW intervalometer and software plugin for Lightroom CC to handle the exposure changes. I did this from the Montrose Harbor area looking down to Chicago, an iconic view of this beautiful city. We started the exposures at 6:40pm and finished 2 hours and 44 minutes later at 9:24pm. This gave us just under a minute of video from the 1,408 images shot. For those interested it was shot with the Canon Mark 5d IV with the 24-105 lens set at F/11. The ISO started at 100 and ended at ISO 8000. The shutter speed started at 1/80 of a second and ended with an exposure of 4.0 seconds. A total of 14.5 stops! Timelapse+ VIEW was setup to change the shutter speed first and then the ISO. Timelapse+ VIEW Intervalometer will automate night to day time-lapse using a light sensor and advanced algorithms. This system worked really well and once you take it into Lightroom in post processing the plugin finds the keyframes which you can use to do the initial processing in Lightroom Development window to make any exposure / color corrections you require. The software then makes these corrections for the entire selection in subtle increments so you have a finished piece with smooth transitions for a beautiful time-lapse.
Now one thing I know I will try next time is starting with at least a 1 second exposure to make the water smoother throughout the time-lapse. I would also go longer into the nighttime view to give a little more room in editing to be able to use a longer nighttime scene.
This Timelapse+ VIEW intervalometer and what we will be able to do with it will be a great addition to The Sweetwater Seas – North America’s Great Lakes documentary! It will be in the equipment bags for every shoot from now on! Can’t wait to get outside along the Great Lakes and do some day to night with the Milky Way winding its way across the screen, and maybe even back to daylight.
Enjoy,
Richard
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