You can download camera apps to use with your Sony A7 (A7R) through Sony's. I've also used the Time Lapse App for shooting time lapse photography. In the V0.2.5 version I added the following for the Sony cameras that have wireless communication • exposure mode button – for models that don’t have an exposure mode dial • capture mode button – user can select with this button between still/movie mode • preview image size button – with this button the user can select the preview image size after capture. On a5100 it has the option original/2M • zoom in/out in live view • added LRTimelapse support • add touch AF to live view – after the user touches the live view surface the camera will try to focus at that point. Unfortunately Sony touchAF is a bit odd, as while it is in touchAF mode the properties can’t be changed, only the capture button will work. To exit the touchAF mode the user needs to press the ‘AF’ button. Regarding the LRTimelapse support I did some testing (using the qDD interval timer) and it worked good for shutter speeds shorter then 1 second. Unfortunately on a5100 there is no option to disable the long exposure NR so a 8 second exposure becomes a 18 second one (with the processing). Do mac users need antivirus. Probably on the higher models it can be disabled so maybe someone can test it. Undercover app for mac. Hi Zoltan, I checked your app using a Nexus 7 and a A7S. It is quite stable, but in LR timelapse mode there seems to be no way to change the interval. Regardless of the interval I choose in the interval timer the time between shots stays at about 7 seconds. Another issue: As you might know there is a silent mode on the A7S which I use all the time because the normal shutter noise is a real nuisance. But when I use qDSLRDashboard the shutter is quite audible. Perhaps there is a way to change this? Apart from that I’m really astonished that your app is far better than Sony’s own timelapse in-camera-app which I bought recently and regretted already 5 minutes later. My donation for your work will come soon! Best regards and many thanx •. Dear zoltan, many many thanks to you for creating this great app it all worked for out good for my sony A6000,, But i have some questions and i really hope you could answer some.! – i will be shooting some wedding’s soon and as you could tell, i’m kind of 0 budget nowadays. My concern is when would we be able to record videos with the qdd?,, and i really don’t care about being able to control it from the tablet but i just want to be able to monitor my recording and see it clearly. ![]() – and do you know any alternatives for this or do you or the reader’s have any solution for me or any?. Thank you so much i will be happy hearing from you •. So I have perused this forum and gathered most of the information I need to create a time lapse with my Sony A7RII, there are just some additional details I need to iron out. For 3 days, I will be doing a time lapse 8 hours each day. I am photographing a tiny house being built from scratch so I'm thinking shots every 5 or 10 seconds. I also don't need the photos to be extremely hi-res. Questions: • What Intervalometer have you had the most success with? • What program do you use to create a time lapse? This will be quite a massive set of photos (approx 2880 photos per day @ 10s per shot) • What size memory card would cover an entire day? • Any additional A7RII settings that are important to change for the lapse to be a success? Thank you so much for your help everyone! Hi SteffaneGrace, I agree that 5 or 10 sec intervals are probably too fast, you'll catch so much data in that time, but then it depends also on what sort of motion you want to capture, eg, whether its fast and jerky, with the building itself being the main focus of attention, or the work being done is of equal importance so perhaps a smoother flow of motion of the build team. What res & format are you going to shoot? That will then calculate out to what size card you need, also consider additional power usage and using a power pack. Simple would be to shoot jpgs at a smaller size. But at the loss of some detail. Best quality & editing options obviously full-frame RAW. But then you may run into issues with data management. Here's a little timelapse of a build I did at work with GoPro's at 1 frame every 30 seconds a few years back, just for some comparative sense of movement/build speed. Hi SteffaneGrace, I agree that 5 or 10 sec intervals are probably too fast, you'll catch so much data in that time, but then it depends also on what sort of motion you want to capture, eg, whether its fast and jerky, with the building itself being the main focus of attention, or the work being done is of equal importance so perhaps a smoother flow of motion of the build team. What res & format are you going to shoot? That will then calculate out to what size card you need, also consider additional power usage and using a power pack. Simple would be to shoot jpgs at a smaller size. But at the loss of some detail. Best quality & editing options obviously full-frame RAW.
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