You all have probably heard for the Time-Lapse photographic technique, where you take photo-by-photo in certain interval of time, and then link all the photos into a video. Julian Tryba takes this procedure one whole level further…
Here is how the author explains the technique:
Traditional time-lapses are constrained by the idea that there is a single universal clock. In the spirit of Einstein's relativity theory, layer-lapses assign distinct clocks to any number of objects or regions in a scene. Each of these clocks may start at any point in time, and tick at any rate. The result is a visual time dilation effect known as layer-lapse.
This is a hard job, but the best thing — it is not all manual! Movies are a combination of mathematical and manual animation, with the goal of creation a layer-lapse film where all the animations are simply decisions made by each layer after analyzing the music and the script it was assigned.
Sounds most exciting, and if you want to see the creative process behind the scene, you can see it at this link.
Duration: 2:41
Duration: 3:08