Coppa Italia Giovani Skialp – Forni di Sopra
(tanto di cappello a video e gare…)
Blog, Video video, video-extra
(tanto di cappello a video e gare…)
Blog, Curiosando, Video curiosando, video, video-extra
A chain of friends touch an electric fence and fall to the ground! […]
Blog, Pianeta Terra, Video montagna, no-dolomiti, pianeta-terra, t-lapse-montagna, timelapse, video, video-extra
5 Years after our epic trip through Patagonia I went through my hard-drives and remastered my favorite scenes that never made the cut in the original video. If you haven’t seen it. Check it out: https://timestormfilms.com […]
Blog, Pianeta Terra, Video pianeta-terra, timelapse, video, video-extra
‘Breath of the Seasons’ has been my personal project from early 2017 until early 2020. Living around the Jutland peninsula in Denmark my entire life, what inspired me to make this film was the very difference between winter, spring, summer and autumn in the already diverse Jutlandic landscapes – and the visually beautiful story this has. To show this cycle in nature through timelapse photography has been a mammoth task and a huge completion for me personally. It has driven me through all spectres emotionally; exhaustion, excitement, despair, joy and everything in between. The countless hours spent on locations made me see and feel the difference of all four seasons. It opened my eyes to how similar nature actually is to humans; As nature takes a single breath all four seasons play before our eyes until she’s ready for the next breath and it all starts over again. Energy is everywhere and nothing is at a standstill.
Blog, Pianeta Terra, Video pianeta-terra, timelapse, video, video-extra
Get immersed in the magical lightshow that Aurora Australis delivers at the geographic South Pole. Filmed at the Admundsen Scott station in Antarctica by Raffaela Busse, experiment operator and astrophysicist at the IceCube Neutrino telescope at the the Amundsen–Scott South Pole Station. She spent a full winter at the pole with over a year on the ice.
Blog, Pianeta Terra, Video pianeta-terra, timelapse, video, video-extra
Volcano Calbuco erupted on April 22, 2015, Exactly 5 years ago from the date of upload of this video. I went through an extensive remastering process to bring you this footage in new sharpness and detail. Also some unusable scenes from before could be rescued and extended this cut.[…]
Blog, Video no-dolomiti, timelapse, video, video-extra
On June 6, 2018, Alex Honnold and Tommy Caldwell climbed The Nose on El Capitan in 01:58:07, setting a speed record for the ages, and fulfilling Honnold’s “lifetime goal” of a sub-2-hour Nose ascent. This is the actual record breaking climb, bottom to top, in one continuous time-lapse shot. From our film The Nose Speed Record, part of REEL ROCK 14. Available to download now from www.ReelRockTour.com
Blog, Pianeta Terra, Video cielo-stellato, pianeta-terra, timelapse, video, video-extra
Home to the darkest and cleanest skies in the world, the Atacama Desert offers views to the nightsky like no other. 2 years after the very successful first video “Nox Atacama” we return to this magnificent region and get rewarded with uncountable numbers of stars and fantastic nebulae in one of the most quiet a empty places on earth. Not a single noise distracts from the grand show the nightsky has to offer. “Nox Atacama II” was also filmed in this period. Check it out here.
Filmed over a month in Mar/April 2019, I worked in freezing temperatures, altitudes up to 5200m/17000ft, salt lakes and icy slopes. The Atacama is not welcoming to life and equipment. The lack of oxygen makes it tough to get anything done in these high altitudes. But it provides without doubt for epic and vast vistas of one of the greatest landscapes on earth.
Some additional, unreleased scenes where used from my 2017 trip to the Atacama Desert.
Blog, Video, Video-Scienza aquila, bbc, video, video-extra, video-scienza
Soar high above the hills of the Scottish Highlands with Tilly the golden Eagle.
Blog, Pianeta Terra, Video pianeta-terra, timelapse, video, video-extra
Filming at the South Pole during the polar night is pretty much as hard as it gets. Temperatures below -70°C/-95°F are not uncommon. Cables break like spaghetti, LCD displays freeze up even electronic components stop working. Cameras always have to be heated, motion control gear modified and setups made storm-proof. Many of the shots in the video have been recorded for 24h or more to capture a full revolution of the earth spinning once around its axis. Shot by Benjamin Eberhardt, experiment operator and astrophysicist at the IceCube Neutrino telescope at the the Amundsen–Scott South Pole Station. He spent a full winter at the pole with over a year spent on the ice.[…]