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Scene notes:
Shadows creep up the towers of the canyon late in the afternoon.
Time-lapse length (30 fps):
5 seconds and 16 frames.
Shadows creep up the towers of the canyon late in the afternoon.
Time-lapse length (30 fps):
5 seconds and 16 frames.
Utah’s National Park is in the rising shade. A cloudless sky.
Time-lapse length (30 fps):
11 seconds.
On an overlook at Bryce Canyon in winter. A low-level stratus layer slowly gives way to light. Similar to
another clip with more lighting, the snow begins to brighten near the end of the clip. The lowlands glow in
the sun’s radiant intensity. This means they both absorb some of the light and emit it in all
directions.
Time-lapse length (30 fps):
44 seconds and 2 frames.
Bryce Canyon National Park in Utah. The sandstone shapes are tufa shaped but are created by different
processes. Pristine snow catches the light in brilliant ways as the sunlight dims periodically over the
landscape intermittently from off-frame clouds.
Time-lapse length (30 fps):
10 seconds and 21 frames.
Capturing a moment of time at dawn in the winter among the positively red hoodoos of sandstone and
dolomite, which owes their odd shapes to the erosive patterns from these rocks. Snow blankets this
unusual and wild landscape, as it stretches and flattens out into the distance where a ridge
separates land and sky. The sun, out of frame, rises, and with it the snow brightens, and shadows
recede.
Time-lapse length (30 fps):
8 seconds and 17 frames.