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Amazing: 24-Hours Stitched Into Single Photo

day-and-night-small.jpg

Note: Full-size version HERE and a version with an overlay showing some of the details of the shot HERE.

This is a photo depicting a single 24-hour time period over Athens (Greece, NOT Georgia) stitched together from a buttload of shots taken by Chris Kotsiopoulos and rendered for over 12-hours. Looks kind of like a Little Big Planet/Super Mario Galaxy planet, doesn't it? YES HUH IT DOES! The logistics:

I began the shooting the morning of December 30, 2010, taking photos with my camera on a tripod facing east. The day portion of this shoot is composed of a dozen shots covering the landscape from east to west as well as the Sun's course across the sky, from sunrise to sunset. I recorded the Sun's position exactly every 15 minutes using an intervalometer, with an astrosolar filter adjusted to the camera lens. In one of the shots, when the Sun was near its maximum altitude, I removed the filter in order to capture a more dramatic shot that showed the Sun's "glare."


After sunset, I took various shots with the camera facing west-northwest in order to achieve a more smooth transition from the day portion to the night portion of the image. The night portion is also composed of a dozen landscape shots but this time from west to east. After the transition" shots, I took a short star trail sequence of approximately half an hour duration, with the camera facing northwest. At 7:30, I turned the camera to the north and started taking the "all-night" star trail shots -- lasting almost 11 hours. After accomplishing this, I then turned the camera to northeast and shot another short half an hour star trail sequence, and then finally, with the camera now facing east-northeast, I took a series of night-to-day transition shots.

Impressive work, Chris. Or should I say, "ZEUS?!" Haha, like a mere mortal could create a shot like that. Nice try, lightning-dick!

Twenty Four Hour View of the Sky [epod]
via
The 24 Hours of One Day In One Single Photo [gizmodo]

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