Stalking the Wily Analemma 37
avi33 writes "Wired has an article on the short list of photographers seeking to capture a shot of the analemma - the sun's figure-eight-shaped declination in the sky over the course of a year. Only a handful of people are known to have done this, and of course the obstacles are many: maintaining the equipment and its positioning, the finicky nature of film, the weather, and the photographer's persistence. Is it just me, or is this crying out for digital automation? Mount a cam to a hardpoint, have it snap a shot every x hours, and overlay them? Why I bet some of you could do this with a perl script in an afternoon. There's a shortage of photos from outside the northern hemisphere, so get busy."
YEAR! (Score:3, Informative)
Photoshop? (Score:2)
Yawn (Score:2)
Re:Yawn (Score:3, Insightful)
I wonder how it's possible to check a digital image to see if it's real or not. I just took an existing analemma and overlayed a random landscape on top of it (which is similar to what is done on film, I think).
Re:Yawn (Score:2)
Re:Yawn (Score:2)
Maybe there should be some "Analemma Committee" where you send in your film and they judge it as real and post it on a website and give you the much deserved credit. And if it's not on said website, assume that it was done with digital assistance or it was done 100% digitally.
Or maybe I'm making a bigger deal out of this than it is. :
Re:Yawn (Score:3, Insightful)
I can see the extra JPG compression on the landscape versus the analemma.
Re:Yawn (Score:2)
Missing the whole point (Score:5, Informative)
Sure, taking the picture itself can easily be automated.
But fixing a camera to a location so that it will not move DAMMIT (relative to the earth, that is), so that it won't get covered in snow/leaves/pigeondoo/..., so that the film won't be ruined by being out in the elements for a year, being in a location where you can reasonably count on having clear skies enough of the time to get the shots (a month of clouds will really screw you up), being able to judge the exposure needed for the sun shots without overexposing the film, then getting the final exposure (to get the background) right....
That takes a lot of skill that you are not going to be easily able to compress into a Perl script.
Re:Missing the whole point (Score:1)
Re:Missing the whole point (Score:2)
That doesn't negate that either would be really cool and fun to do. But the repeated exposure film is decidedly more impressive, IMO.
--
Evan
Re:Missing the whole point (Score:4, Interesting)
If you're interested in the science, a set of digital photos of reasonably high quality which are then composited are just as good as a single piece of film.
If you're looking at it from an art point of view, and more the 'art of photography' view rather than the 'look at this nice-looking picture' view, well, then maybe you want the one bit of film, so you can get the 'true nature' of the subject and appreciate the 'artists skill'.
But, in the long run, the digitally composited photo is _still_ by definition a photo of an analemma, and can be just as pretty ( maybe prettier ) than it's analog component.
Exposure (Score:2)
Submitter is tres-lame (Score:4, Insightful)
That is not the same an orchestra performing it.
Some things are just cooler in analong.
Huh? (Score:3, Funny)
Neat (Score:1)
The only problem I forsee is if I mount the camera outs
Re:Neat (Score:3, Interesting)
Some of them are online.
Oh, boy, am I asking for a slashdotting? This is being hosted on a 300 MHz K7 on a 768 kilobit DSL line. I'll play it conservatively: just search google for webbwerks and timelapse. That should cut down t
Re:Good to see they did't misspell my name. (Score:3, Interesting)
BTM
Re:Good to see they did't misspell my name. (Score:4, Funny)
I can't believe this has been modded up.
Exhibit 1: Slashdot user name "schoolsucks" and is proud of his new PS2 [slashdot.org], yet claims to have been an editor for a major scientific publication 25 years ago.
Exhibit 2: Does this [slashdot.org] look like the work of an editor for a major publication?
Exhibit 3: -1, Troll [slashdot.org]
OTOH, I almost thought it was cool enough to put him on my Friends list, so he had me going for a while, too...
the pictures (Score:1)
here [perseus.gr]
Get in quick!
Any in the land of Oz? (Score:2)
And can you imagine how cool it would be to have an analemma with Uluru in the foreground?
Re:Any in the land of Oz? (Score:1)
This analemma idea might just be the clincher. It'd be superb for this house (on its way to being a historic
Ugh (Score:2)
Burn out the CCD (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Burn out the CCD (Score:2)
TV station towercams probably have the data (Score:2, Interesting)
If any stations bothered to aim in the same direction every day at the same time, and keep the tapes, the raw data exists for an animation loop.
Superimposing the stills and adjusting the exposure will give you the photograph.
Sure, it's not as challenging, but it's still a sight to behold.
Reading the analemma (Score:2)
Re:Reading the analemma (Score:2)
Daylight Savings Time (Score:2)