garethhhhh
11th of October 2004 (Mon), 00:13
I wasn't sure if this has been posted before, so I did a search before posting and couldn't find anything...
http://www.canon-youconnect.com/05/en/amanaplanacamera.html
A man. A plan. A camera.
In the summer of 2002, Heinz von Heydenaber started a two-week journey, which would end up taking him more than a year to complete. Starting in Rome, he fixed his EOS D60 to the roof of his Renault Kangoo van, taped a stone to the shutter release to hold it down, and hit the road.
Two weeks later, and he was in Fokstugu, Norway. The fun was over. When he returned to his home, the work began: turning 77,000 photographs into a single frame of what would become an incredible movie.
Heinz did the whole thing himself, from the laborious alignment of images to smooth out the drive, to the careful editing – he even recorded his own music for the soundtrack.
The result is “The Road to Fokstugu” – an amazing film that shows a unique journey from Italy to Norway – at an average speed of 2,500 kph.
http://www.canon-youconnect.com/05/en/amanaplanacamera.html
A man. A plan. A camera.
In the summer of 2002, Heinz von Heydenaber started a two-week journey, which would end up taking him more than a year to complete. Starting in Rome, he fixed his EOS D60 to the roof of his Renault Kangoo van, taped a stone to the shutter release to hold it down, and hit the road.
Two weeks later, and he was in Fokstugu, Norway. The fun was over. When he returned to his home, the work began: turning 77,000 photographs into a single frame of what would become an incredible movie.
Heinz did the whole thing himself, from the laborious alignment of images to smooth out the drive, to the careful editing – he even recorded his own music for the soundtrack.
The result is “The Road to Fokstugu” – an amazing film that shows a unique journey from Italy to Norway – at an average speed of 2,500 kph.