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Scene notes:
Stationary shot; the continuation of another clip. The camera orientation has been adjusted.
Time-lapse length (30 fps):
18 seconds and 20 frames.
Stationary shot; the continuation of another clip. The camera orientation has been adjusted.
Time-lapse length (30 fps):
18 seconds and 20 frames.
The continuation of another clip. The camera has been adjusted with exposure.
Time-lapse length (30 fps):
12 seconds and 14 frames.
As the moon rises and the frame zooms in digitally, the mountains increase in natural light, stars overhead in a cloudless sky. The scene displays low to medium coma. The mountains are half-snow-covered, the other half is too steep, rock faces and cliffs that plunge. Flutings comprise the cirques of accumulated snow.
Time-lapse length (30 fps):
12 seconds and 28 frames.
Lenticular clouds (the continuation of another clip mixed in with other mid-level clouds. Lenticular clouds come in a variety of shapes but they are unique in that they are generally stationary.
…or a sunset on snowy bright mountains. The moon rising sends enough alpenglow to the mountainsides to brighten them like a sunrise. The stars overhead in the top half of the frame wheel around as the Earth spins at night.
Time-lapse length (30 fps):
16 seconds and 25 frames.
The mountain rises into the night sky, cloudless, and starry. A low to medium amount of coma is evident.
Time-lapse length (30 fps):
15 seconds and 29 frames.
Low mist pouring over darkened mountains at night. Stars move overhead in very long exposure and large aperture.
After blue hour, mid-level clouds, patchy and fleeting, move in steadily in the moonlight, shadows dimly moving on rock faces near the bottom-right of the frame at points. Mt Whitney (center) and neighbors are silhouetted in the night, with nearer mountains that are shorter but much closer on the left and right flanks.
Time-lapse length (30 fps):
20 seconds and one frame.