Some classic subjects of time-lapse photography include: • Landscapes and celestial motion • Plants and flowers growing • Fruit rotting • Evolution of a construction project • People in the city The technique has been used to photograph crowds, traffic, and even television. The effect of photographing a subject that changes imperceptibly slowly creates a smooth impression of motion. A subject that changes quickly is transformed into an onslaught of activity. The inception of time-lapse
photography occurred in 1872 when
Leland Stanford hired
Eadweard Muybridge to prove whether or not race horses hooves ever are simultaneously in the air when running. The experiments progressed for 6 years until 1878 when Muybridge set up a series of cameras for every few feet of a track which had tripwires the horses triggered as they ran. The photos taken from the multiple cameras were then compiled into a collection of images that recorded the horses running. The first use of time-lapse photography in a feature film was in
Georges Méliès' motion picture ''Carrefour De L'Opera'' (1897).
F. Percy Smith pioneered the use of time-lapse in nature photography with his 1910
silent film The Birth of a Flower. Time-lapse photography of biological phenomena was pioneered by Jean Comandon in collaboration with
Pathé Frères from 1909, by
F. Percy Smith in 1910 and
Roman Vishniac from 1915 to 1918. Time-lapse photography was further pioneered in the 1920s via a series of feature films called
Bergfilme (
mountain films) by
Arnold Fanck, including
Das Wolkenphänomen in Maloja (1924) and
The Holy Mountain (1926). From 1929 to 1931,
R. R. Rife astonished journalists with early demonstrations of high magnification time-lapse cine-micrography, but no filmmaker can be credited for popularizing time-lapse techniques more than
John Ott, whose life work is documented in the film
Exploring the Spectrum. Ott's initial "day-job" career was that of a banker, with time-lapse movie photography, mostly of plants, initially just a hobby. Starting in the 1930s, Ott bought and built more and more time-lapse equipment, eventually building a large greenhouse full of plants, cameras, and even self-built automated electric motion control systems for moving the cameras to follow the growth of plants as they developed. He time-lapsed his entire greenhouse of plants and cameras as they worked—a virtual symphony of time-lapse movement. His work was featured on a late 1950s episode of the request TV show
You Asked for It. Ott discovered that the movement of plants could be manipulated by varying the amount of water the plants were given, and varying the color temperature of the lights in the studio. Some colors caused the plants to flower, and other colors caused the plants to bear fruit. Ott discovered ways to change the sex of plants merely by varying the light source's color temperature. By using these techniques, Ott time-lapse animated plants "dancing" up and down synchronized to pre-recorded music tracks. His cinematography of flowers blooming in such classic documentaries as Walt Disney's
Secrets of Life (1956), pioneered the modern use of time-lapse on film and television. Ott wrote several books on the history of his time-lapse adventures including
My Ivory Cellar (1958) and
Health and Light (1979), and produced the 1975 documentary film
Exploring the Spectrum. The
Oxford Scientific Film Institute in
Oxford, United Kingdom, specializes in time-lapse and slow-motion systems, and has developed camera systems that can go into (and move through) small places. Their footage has appeared in TV documentaries and movies. PBS's
NOVA series aired a full episode on time-lapse (and slow motion) photography and systems in 1981 titled
Moving Still. Highlights of Oxford's work are slow-motion shots of a dog shaking water off himself, with close ups of drops knocking a bee off a flower, as well as a time-lapse sequence of the decay of a dead mouse. The
non-narrative feature film
Koyaanisqatsi (1983) contained time-lapse images of clouds, crowds, and cities filmed by cinematographer
Ron Fricke. Years later, Ron Fricke produced a solo project called
Chronos shot using
IMAX cameras. Fricke used the technique extensively in the documentary
Baraka (1992) which he photographed on
Todd-AO (
70 mm) film. Countless other films, commercials, TV shows and presentations have included time-lapse material. For example,
Peter Greenaway's film
A Zed & Two Noughts features a sub-plot involving time-lapse photography of decomposing animals and includes a composition called "Time Lapse" written for the film by
Michael Nyman. In the late 1990s, Adam Zoghlin's time-lapse cinematography was featured in the
CBS television series
Early Edition, depicting the adventures of a character that receives tomorrow's newspaper today.
David Attenborough's 1995 series
The Private Life of Plants also utilised the technique extensively. ==Terminology==