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How To Make Campfire
594 frames, shot f10 1/40th of a second at iso 800 for the whole thing. The photos are taken every 2 seconds so this timelapse runs from 5:47pm to 6:06pm.
People: Claira, Helen, John, Nara

John Harvey Photo > John's Overnight Page > Prince Rupert Road Trip > Prince Rupert > How To Make Campfire

Sunset On Chesterman Beach
The lens was set to 29mm. Photography started at 8:06pm, f5.6 at 1/2500th of a second (under exposed 2 stops, ISO 100) and ended at 10:09pm at f5.6, 6 second exposure, ISO 200. There were 918 photos taken at a 8 second interval.
No stabilization required. Exposure compensation in post was pretty easy. Shame there wasn't much of a sunset, but the beach fire at the end really helped. The family did have a metal beach fire basket thing which is required on this beach.
John Harvey Photo > Blogs for 2024 to 2005 > Tofino Wedding > Sunset On Chesterman Beach

Fort Langley Campfire At Sunset
394 Frames. The exposure kind of falls apart at the end so I had to do the blend two frames trick to stop the flickering.
John Harvey Photo > Blogs for 2024 to 2005 > June 2019 > Fort Langley Campfire At Sunset

Second Night Campfire
642 Frames - started at roughly 1/4 of a second every 10 seconds, ended at 8 seconds every 10 seconds. I used silent mode that prevent you from seeing the exposure as it shoots (but is much quieter. I had to change the exposure on most of the frames to get the exposure to run smoothly and even then it was a bit of a mess.

Most of the kids are from the other tent's.


John Harvey Photo > Blogs for 2024 to 2005 > June 2019 > Second Night Campfire

Good Creek Fire
The fire was started by a lighting strike the day before. The Okanagan Mountain Park fire was in the same general area so there wasn't much fuel left for this fire to burn.

I setup my tripod in the door of the car while I waited in the lineup to get to our camp site (close to the Mount Enas fire). This is a photo every 10 seconds. I needed to do quite a bit of stabilization in post because the tripod wasn't super stable.


John Harvey Photo > John Harvey Photo - Camping > Okanagan Camping 3 > Good Creek Fire

Mount Enas Fire
As we got closer to the Mount Enas Fire, we got a better view of the extent of it.

10 second gap between photos. Some stabilization between frame 10 and 150 when we weren't moving.


John Harvey Photo > John Harvey Photo - Camping > Okanagan Camping 3 > Mount Enas Fire

Approaching Fire
Approaching Fire
John Harvey Photo > John Harvey Photo - Camping > Okanagan Camping 3 > Approaching Fire