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rpi-timelapse

A timelapse camera controller for Raspberry Pi. Testet with Canon EOS 600D and Canon EOS 6D (should work with any camera supported by gphoto2 with minor tweaks), with an optional UI and controls on the Adafruit LCD Pi plate.

Installation

rpi-timelapse uses imagemagick. To install these dependencies on your pi:

$ sudo apt-get install imagemagick

and for gphoto2 see https://github.com/gonzalo/gphoto2-updater/

$ wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/gonzalo/gphoto2-updater/master/gphoto2-updater.sh && chmod +x gphoto2-updater.sh && sudo ./gphoto2-updater.sh

for the 16x2 character lcd + keypad

sudo apt-get install i2c-tools

test the connection with

sudo i2cdetect -y 0 (if you are using a version 1 Raspberry Pi)
sudo i2cdetect -y 1 (if you are using a version 2 Raspberry Pi)

and enable the GPIO's with

sudo raspi-config

and follow the instructions in section A7

Run

python tl.py

Run on boot

Follow the instructions at http://learn.adafruit.com/drive-a-16x2-lcd-directly-with-a-raspberry-pi/init-script using timelapse file from this repo instead of lcd.

Post-Processing

Here's how to post process the image frames (on Linux, can be run on the Pi itself, but faster on desktop).

Remove flicker if timelapse used many shutter values

for a in *; do echo $a;/usr/bin/mogrify -auto-gamma $a;done

Be careful with auto-gamma - it works extremely well for sunset / sunrise but can make very dark areas of the scene very noisy.

Convert the resulting JPEGs to a timelapse movie

ffmpeg -r 18 -q:v 2 -start_number XXXX -i IMG_%d.JPG output.mp4

Demo Video on YouTube (view in HD)

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Timelapse Camera Controller for Raspberry Pi

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  • Python 98.8%
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