LRTimelapse Pro 6
Author: s | 2025-04-23
LRTimelapse 6 Pro Crossgrade (from LRT5 or LRT6 Private) Transform your LRTimelapse 5 or 6 Private license into a LRTimelapse 6 Pro license. 180.00 € Add to cart
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#TIME LAPSE TOOL DOWNLOAD MOVIE# #TIME LAPSE TOOL DOWNLOAD INSTALL# #TIME LAPSE TOOL DOWNLOAD PRO# #TIME LAPSE TOOL DOWNLOAD SOFTWARE# This will take you to the import dialog window. To import your images, click on the blue file icon with a green arrow. Open the program, and you will have this window. Go to and download it for the appropriate operating system. The first thing you need to do is download and install LRTimelapse. Make sure you have one of these Lightroom versions, otherwise it will not work. NOTE: LRTimelapse supports Lightroom CC Classic, 6, 5 and 4 as well as Adobe Camera Raw, Bridge and After Effects in the corresponding versions. Using LRTimelapse is simple, especially after watching their handy tutorial video. Secondly, as you are moving images between the program and Lightroom Classic CC, you have a chance to add post-processing to your images. There are many great things about this program. These are downloaded from Adobe free of charge, here. You can download it for free, here.Īnother software you will need to have for this program to work is a DNG converter. Gunther is a passionate photographer and lets us use his time-lapse tool without any strings. Don’t worry about watermarks appearing on your video after all your hard work. A higher number of images can be used, but only if you buy the pro license the software. LRTimelapse is a free product if you use fewer than 400 images. If you need to download the software, you can find a free trial here. If you haven’t used Adobe Lightroom Classic CC before, then you need to read our all-encompassing guide, here. It isn’t a plugin, but a separate tool that uses parts of Lightroom to create a timelapse. With Time Lapse MovieMonkey, you can render the events that happened in one place, during an entire day, for instance, in 10 seconds of movie.If you don’t have a stack of images ready for transformation, you will need to do so to follow this tutorial guide.Īlthough this great piece of software has the name Lightroom in it, it was actually developed by a man by the name of Gunther Wegner. When the process is finished, the movie is saved to the installation folder, that you can easily access by clicking the dedicated button. A progress bar and counter can give you insight on the duration of the task. 24 hours in ten secondsĪfter setting all the required options, Time Lapse MovieMonkey can process the photos and encode your movie. The software can automatically resize all the photos in order to fit the selected resolution and it notifies you if the values for the width and height are supported or not. AVI.īefore saving the time lapse movie, you may manually set the resolution and the percentage of the photo resizing. Otherwise, the only supported output format is. Selecting a specific codec determines the degree of compression applied to the output movie. Time Lapse MovieMonkey allows you to select the
LRTimelapse 6 Pro Upgrade (from LRT 4 Pro) - LRTimelapse
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Has a flicker filter.They work differently, you use LRTimelapse if you have a pile of raws and use Lightroom, GBdeflicker or VirtualDub if you have converted to a pile of JPEGs already or even a video file.Wow Joseph, you have got the reply I was looking for! THANKS you da' man!You are quite welcome. Glad you found it useful.I use after effects and will look into some de-flicker programs/plug-ins for a temporary fix. I was able to subdue the artifact somewhat by speeding up the timelapse by about 60%,That probably caused After Effects to apply some "motion interpolation", smoothing the changes from frame to frame, so the sped up video looked more natural.which incidently works better for the :15 sec shot I was shooting for. (I'll post up my shot in a few days, right now I'm putting graphics, music, and vo on it, as its a spec commercial)I know you said renting a lens will be best, and luckily i have some great resources around portland, oregon for it. However I would hate to buy a Zeiss lens for a nikon when I just bought a new canon!Unfrotunatley, it's either that or the tape thing. Only way to 100% kill the flicker on the ZE Zeiss lenses.And would love a Zeiss lens for shooting Real-Time video--however, I have found no problems using my 24-105, and 70-200 for straight video although I know a prime lens would be much crisper. What do you think the other advantages to a prime lens would be for video, (other than being crisper and obviously...faster)?Primes generally "breathe" a lot less than zooms, that is, there's not dramatic shifts in focal length as you focus closer. A 70-200 will be 200m at infinity, but when you focus down to 6 feet, it will shorten to 140-160mm. So, when you focus closer, it looks like you're simultaneously zooming out or dollying out. Makes a focus tracking dialogue look like crap.The trick you mention sounds pretty tempting... without having to buy an new lens. but I will pick up the Nikon-to-Canon adaptor and find some older MF nikon lenses that have a manual aperture ring. They're pretty inexpensive for a great lens. Thanks again Joseph!!!!You're welcome again, Kite.-- hide signature --Rahon Klavanian 1912-2008. Armenian genocide survivor, amazing cook, scrabble master, and loving grandmother. You will be missed. Ciao! Joseph www.swissarmyfork.com Nikon D90 Nikon D2X Nikon D3 Nikon. LRTimelapse 6 Pro Crossgrade (from LRT5 or LRT6 Private) Transform your LRTimelapse 5 or 6 Private license into a LRTimelapse 6 Pro license. 180.00 € Add to cart LRTimelapse 6 Pro Crossgrade (from LRT5 or LRT6 Private) Transform your LRTimelapse 5 or 6 Private license into a LRTimelapse 6 Pro license. 180.00 € Add to cartPro LRT 6 to 7 - LRTimelapse
This is new in the LRTimelapse 4.3 update:Support for Mac OS X 10.11 “El Capitan” – Apple is introducing major changes to the security model of Mac OS with the upcoming version 10.11 (will be released this fall), so many software will have to be upgraded (currently for example a clean install of Lightroom 5.x is not possible, since it cannot generate it’s user-settings). LRTimelapse 4.3 should consider all those changes now, but currently only a beta of 10.11 is available, so no one knows what else Apple will possibly change… As usual, please provide feedback in the forum, if you experience any problems.LRTimelapse running on OS X “El Capitan” beta 6Fixed problem with simulaneous exports via LRTExport – sometimes when the first part finished, the others were aborted too – this is a major improvement to the stability of the LRTExport plugin if you work with multiple exports in parallel.LRTExport now transfers Exif-Data like Date-Time-Original to the LRT_ intermediary sequences – this was a user requests.Automatically generated filenames by the render module sometimes did not reflect the resolution substring correctly, this has been fixed.Outdated Visual Previews will now be refreshed immediately without first loading the outdated ones, this will save some time when working with the Visual Previews and Visual DeflickerThe “Create Visual Previews” batch operation can now be aborted.Create Visual Previews Batch operation will now take care of outdated XMPs and redo the development for them.Improved importer: processes can now be cancelled, better multitaskingUI: Added “Set Crop Keyframe (*****)” to Main Menu and Popup MenuRenderer could fail when exporting and rendering in original size and the pixel dimensions were not multiples of 8, fixed. Now such sizes will be automatically rounded.When working with incompatible XMP versions (LR3 mode), the Autotransition would crash, fixed. Like I already announced, the support for Lightroom 3 will be ended with the next major version of LRTimelapse (LRT5)“Flat” DNG-Files, that means DNGs made from JPG or TIFF files, would not animate the WB, fixed.I hope you enjoy the new version and the improvements that I’ve made. If so, I’d appreciate, if you spread the word about LRTimelapse!You can download the upgrade straight from the download page.Best wishes, GuntherLRTimelapse 6 Pro (2nd Rate)
If you want to make cinema-quality timelapse videos then you need to know which software to use.In this blog post, I'm talking about some must-have timelapse software and plugins for.I've broken up the needed software into different skill levels.Links on this page may be affiliate links, which help support this website.At this level, you want to keep things simple and straightforward.Be it JPEG or RAW sequences that you want to edit, you likely don't want to buy expensive software or get stuck into a subscription-based model.The two most user-friendly and value-for-money timelapse software I've found are GlueMotion and TimelapseDeflicker for Mac and PC.They both have a free and a paid version and allow deflickering, rendering, keyframing, and more.Want to learn how to use all this? Download my free e-book about timelapse photography below!Enthusiast Timelapse SoftwareYou've exceeded the limits of what free or cheap software can do for you and you want better control over your RAW image sequences and all the editing that comes with it.The combination of Adobe Lightroom Classic and LRTimelapse is a must-have, used by the majority of professionals in the timelapse world.Watch my Holy Grail editing tutorial video here to get a preview of what you can achieve.EDIT: Here is an updated video showing how you can use the new LRTimelapse 7 without using Adobe Lightroom Classic.Advanced Timelapse SoftwarePowerful software and plugins for the seasoned timelapse professional.Organize your footage in Lightroom with the Timelapse+ Studio plugin. Color grade your RAW sequences in Adobe Lightroom Classic. Deflicker and ramp your settings with LRTimelapse. Edit hyperlapses, create time-slices, and render your master files with Adobe After Effects. Reduce the noise in your footage with Neat Video.A special shoutout to DaVinci Resolve Studio which keeps on improving and is now almost a one-stop-shop for timelapse photographers. Watch my videos about it here.Watch all my other timelapse editing tutorials here.LRTimelapse Forum - LRTimelapse 6 - General Questions
Both have free trials.If you want something totally free, but considerably more awkward, VirtualDub has a flicker filter.They work differently, you use LRTimelapse if you have a pile of raws and use Lightroom, GBdeflicker or VirtualDub if you have converted to a pile of JPEGs already or even a video file.Third, don't try that trick with the tape. Seriously, don't.Good luck, have fun.-- hide signature --Rahon Klavanian 1912-2008. Armenian genocide survivor, amazing cook, scrabble master, and loving grandmother. You will be missed. Ciao! Joseph www.swissarmyfork.com Nikon D90 Nikon D2X Nikon D3 Nikon D100 Nikon Z7 +56 more "}"> noirdesir • Forum Pro • Posts: 13,804 Re: It is the aperture, and use Zeiss ZF, not ZE... 3 Joseph S Wisniewski wrote:Despite what the other two "contributors" to this thread said about that being "bogus" or there being a "far more plausible explanation", the aperture inconsistency between shots is indeed the most common cause of flickering in time-lapse sequences.The ZF (Nikon mount) Zeiss lenses have an aperture ring. You can use them with an inexpensive Nikon to Canon adapter, just like you'd use with Nikon lenses themselves.There's also a trick some Canon timelapsers use that scares the crap out of me. Use a Canon lens, set your aperture, hit the DOF preview, dismount the lens without turning off the camera. The lens is now set to your desired aperture. Cover the contacts on the lens with tape, and remount it. Again, I would not do this, there's just too many things that can go wrong. I only mention it now because, if you're Googling around, you're going to get someone who says "sure, just do this". Well, don't.For Nikon users (where the aperture ring does not help as the camera opens and closes the aperture anyway with each shot) I have another trick: Set the f-stop for metering and exposure evaluation and then carefully 'unscrew' the lens a little bit. This will disconnect the aperture lever in lens from the one in the camera and lens will remain stopped down. Just don't unscrew it too much so that the lens doesn't fall off.Using a cheap lens is recommended. (I have done this in the past and would do it again, just checking very carefully that the lens has still enough grip and nothing touches or shakes the lens or camera.) "}"> Re: It is the aperture, and use Zeiss ZF, notLRTimelapse Pro 6. License Key - Download
ZE... 2 Joseph S Wisniewski wrote:The ZF (Nikon mount) Zeiss lenses have an aperture ring. You can use them with an inexpensive Nikon to Canon adapter, just like you'd use with Nikon lenses themselves. The Zeiss ZE lenses for Canon mount have exactly the same problem Canon lenses do. You don't have to restrict yourself to totally manual focus Nikkors, you can also use AF lenses as long as they're not "G" types.For video, even 1080p HD, pretty much any Nikkor or Zeiss lens has sufficient quality, so it's more a matter of what matches the focal lengths that you need. If you're a zoom sort of person, that pretty much means Nikon.There's also a trick some Canon timelapsers use that scares the crap out of me. Use a Canon lens, set your aperture, hit the DOF preview, dismount the lens without turning off the camera. The lens is now set to your desired aperture. Cover the contacts on the lens with tape, and remount it. Again, I would not do this, there's just too many things that can go wrong. I only mention it now because, if you're Googling around, you're going to get someone who says "sure, just do this". Well, don't.Sure. First, rent or borrow the lens before you buy.Second, depending on the severity of the flicker, and your workflow, you might want to try a "deflicker" program like GBdeflicker or LRTimelapse. They both have free trials.If you want something totally free, but considerably more awkward, VirtualDub has a flicker filter.They work differently, you use LRTimelapse if you have a pile of raws and use Lightroom, GBdeflicker or VirtualDub if you have converted to a pile of JPEGs already or even a video file.Wow Joseph, you have got the reply I was looking for! THANKS you da' man!I use after effects and will look into some de-flicker programs/plug-ins for a temporary fix. I was able to subdue the artifact somewhat by speeding up the timelapse by about 60%, which incidently works better for the :15 sec shot I was shooting for. (I'll post up my shot in a few days, right now I'm putting graphics, music, and vo on it, as its a spec commercial)I know you said renting a lens will be best, and luckily i have some great resources around portland, oregon for it. However I would hate to buy a Zeiss lens for a. LRTimelapse 6 Pro Crossgrade (from LRT5 or LRT6 Private) Transform your LRTimelapse 5 or 6 Private license into a LRTimelapse 6 Pro license. 180.00 € Add to cart LRTimelapse 6 Pro Crossgrade (from LRT5 or LRT6 Private) Transform your LRTimelapse 5 or 6 Private license into a LRTimelapse 6 Pro license. 180.00 € Add to cart
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It the exact same spot each time. It's close, but in bright exposures and with small apertures, you're going to be in flicker city, because the minute difference between really bright and really really bright will be plainly visible in the form of flicker. And with the small apertures like f16, the blades go from wide open to a small opening, and the camera just doesn't get it exactly right each time.Joseph's taping method works, but an alternate method is to the the "lens twist." Google lens twist, you'll get a hundred vids. It's simple, While the lens is on, hit your DoF button. If you haven't customized it yet, on the 5Diii it's by default the button near on the opposite side of the lens release button around the lens base when it's on the camera. By pressing that, you should see the blades come down. While still holding the DoF button, press the lens release button (finger acrobatics required) disengage the lens and twist it half an inch to an inch, NO MORE. Let go of all buttons.Your lens will be frozen at the aperture you've selected. Voila. Any flicker that remains will be as a result of another issue, not aperture flicker.Careful now. Don't do suspended macro shots now, who knows, your camera might get bumped, and your lens will fall out. Play with it a bit, and find the right spot where the camera and lens are secured, but the lens is still disengaged which will produce a "00" in the aperture value on the top of the camera display.Also note, you'll have no EXIF data on the lens twisted shots. Sooo....write down your setting if you need em. Back to the good ol' days.Combining this method with LRTimelapse, Gunther Wagner's incredible software, and you'll have a really great setup for day time lapse. LRTimelapse is expensive, but well worth the cash. He partners with the developer of Qdslr dashboard for wireless control of the camera for Holygrail Timelapse.For astro stuff, you should need to worry about aperture flicker, as you'll hopefully be wide open, and the phenonoma is much less present in the dark and at f 1.4.-SoW Keyboard shortcuts: FForum MMy threads Latest sample galleries Latest in-depth reviews Panasonic has reinvented its high-res full-framer as a hybrid all-rounder, but it's the promised of improved AF that grabbed our attention.The newest version of Panasonic's MicroDOWNLOAD LRTimelapse Pro CRACKED IN 2025 / LRTimelapse Pro
To either hold off updating to 9.0, or there is also a temporary workaround described on the LRTimelapse Forum.A number of Plugins will need an updated version, for example the ones written by Jeffrey Friedl, as they relate to the Classic catalog database structure (visit Jeffrey’s site for his updated ones).Bug fixes:This is a major update so lots of work was put into the new features but it did also include bug fixes. Adobe only publishes the ones that were reported by users.Lightroom Classic 7.3.1: Preset Export problemLightroom Classic CC: JPEG Identity Plate does not print when set to Render Behind ImageLightroom Classic 8.2: Impromptu slideshow keyboard shortcut doesn’t work on Windows 10Lightroom Classic: French translation error to delete = effacer, to remove=retirerLightroom SDK: Preserved File Name not accessible via the SDKLightroom Classic: “Synchronize Settings” very slow, using 10% CPULightroom Classic: Pick up flag shown on bottom list of photos when mouse hoversLightroom Classic: Copying metadata from videos in no longer working since last updateLightroom Classic 8.4: Keywords entry not workingLightroom Classic: Tethering for Nikon D700 stalled when Photoshop open at same time?Lightroom Classic: Apply During Import missing from Import windowLightroom Classic: Side panels erratically overlay import dialog on macOS MojaveIf you find a bug, click here to learn how to report it to Adobe.How do I update?To update, go to Help menu > Updates or click the Update button in the CC app. The update servers take a while to push the updates around the world, to avoid overloading the servers. You can also open the Creative Cloud app, click the … icon (top right) and select Check for Updates to give it a nudge.Is the book updated?The eBooks for Adobe Lightroom Classic – The Missing FAQ are already updated for these changes, and available for download in the Members Area for current Classic Premium Members.. LRTimelapse 6 Pro Crossgrade (from LRT5 or LRT6 Private) Transform your LRTimelapse 5 or 6 Private license into a LRTimelapse 6 Pro license. 180.00 € Add to cartLRTimelapse 6 Pro Upgrade (from LRT 5 Pro)
Kraemer wrote:Ive got a canon 5D3 and am beginning to do timelapse. I have the 24-105 L lens and used the aperture priority on my 1st timelapse. It was a sunset-to-night shot. I noticed a slight flickering. It was recommended by one colleague that I use manual aperture lenses because even tho I shot with my lens of F5.6, the aperture opens and closes each time the camera fires, and it doesn't make it to the "exact same F5.6 "Despite what the other two "contributors" to this thread said about that being "bogus" or there being a "far more plausible explanation", the aperture inconsistency between shots is indeed the most common cause of flickering in time-lapse sequences.Will a fully manual lens alleviate this problem? If so, which ones? Nikons? Zeiss? I don't think Canon made a manual aperture lens that I would want to use, but I looked at some of the new Zeiss lenses and they don't have an aperture ring.The ZF (Nikon mount) Zeiss lenses have an aperture ring. You can use them with an inexpensive Nikon to Canon adapter, just like you'd use with Nikon lenses themselves. The Zeiss ZE lenses for Canon mount have exactly the same problem Canon lenses do. You don't have to restrict yourself to totally manual focus Nikkors, you can also use AF lenses as long as they're not "G" types.For video, even 1080p HD, pretty much any Nikkor or Zeiss lens has sufficient quality, so it's more a matter of what matches the focal lengths that you need. If you're a zoom sort of person, that pretty much means Nikon.There's also a trick some Canon timelapsers use that scares the crap out of me. Use a Canon lens, set your aperture, hit the DOF preview, dismount the lens without turning off the camera. The lens is now set to your desired aperture. Cover the contacts on the lens with tape, and remount it. Again, I would not do this, there's just too many things that can go wrong. I only mention it now because, if you're Googling around, you're going to get someone who says "sure, just do this". Well, don't.Can anyone of you Timelapse buffs help me out?Sure. First, rent or borrow the lens before you buy.Second, depending on the severity of the flicker, and your workflow, you might want to try a "deflicker" program like GBdeflicker or LRTimelapse. TheyComments
#TIME LAPSE TOOL DOWNLOAD MOVIE# #TIME LAPSE TOOL DOWNLOAD INSTALL# #TIME LAPSE TOOL DOWNLOAD PRO# #TIME LAPSE TOOL DOWNLOAD SOFTWARE# This will take you to the import dialog window. To import your images, click on the blue file icon with a green arrow. Open the program, and you will have this window. Go to and download it for the appropriate operating system. The first thing you need to do is download and install LRTimelapse. Make sure you have one of these Lightroom versions, otherwise it will not work. NOTE: LRTimelapse supports Lightroom CC Classic, 6, 5 and 4 as well as Adobe Camera Raw, Bridge and After Effects in the corresponding versions. Using LRTimelapse is simple, especially after watching their handy tutorial video. Secondly, as you are moving images between the program and Lightroom Classic CC, you have a chance to add post-processing to your images. There are many great things about this program. These are downloaded from Adobe free of charge, here. You can download it for free, here.Īnother software you will need to have for this program to work is a DNG converter. Gunther is a passionate photographer and lets us use his time-lapse tool without any strings. Don’t worry about watermarks appearing on your video after all your hard work. A higher number of images can be used, but only if you buy the pro license the software. LRTimelapse is a free product if you use fewer than 400 images. If you need to download the software, you can find a free trial here. If you haven’t used Adobe Lightroom Classic CC before, then you need to read our all-encompassing guide, here. It isn’t a plugin, but a separate tool that uses parts of Lightroom to create a timelapse. With Time Lapse MovieMonkey, you can render the events that happened in one place, during an entire day, for instance, in 10 seconds of movie.If you don’t have a stack of images ready for transformation, you will need to do so to follow this tutorial guide.Īlthough this great piece of software has the name Lightroom in it, it was actually developed by a man by the name of Gunther Wegner. When the process is finished, the movie is saved to the installation folder, that you can easily access by clicking the dedicated button. A progress bar and counter can give you insight on the duration of the task. 24 hours in ten secondsĪfter setting all the required options, Time Lapse MovieMonkey can process the photos and encode your movie. The software can automatically resize all the photos in order to fit the selected resolution and it notifies you if the values for the width and height are supported or not. AVI.īefore saving the time lapse movie, you may manually set the resolution and the percentage of the photo resizing. Otherwise, the only supported output format is. Selecting a specific codec determines the degree of compression applied to the output movie. Time Lapse MovieMonkey allows you to select the
2025-04-08LRTimelapse Forum LRTimelapse PRO Timer LRT PRO Timer - General Discussion (English) LRT PRO Timer - General Discussion (English) Please check also the instructions and information on the homepage of the timer: LRT PRO Timer - General Discussion (English) 1,149 0 Vote(s) - 0 out of 5 in Average 943 0 Vote(s) - 0 out of 5 in Average 681 0 Vote(s) - 0 out of 5 in Average 527 0 Vote(s) - 0 out of 5 in Average 841 0 Vote(s) - 0 out of 5 in Average 682 0 Vote(s) - 0 out of 5 in Average 559 0 Vote(s) - 0 out of 5 in Average 840 0 Vote(s) - 0 out of 5 in Average 652 0 Vote(s) - 0 out of 5 in Average 1,162 0 Vote(s) - 0 out of 5 in Average 1,254 0 Vote(s) - 0 out of 5 in Average 809 0 Vote(s) - 0 out of 5 in Average 1,448 0 Vote(s) - 0 out of 5 in Average 792 0 Vote(s) - 0 out of 5 in Average 1,028 0 Vote(s) - 0 out of 5 in Average 1,420 0 Vote(s) - 0 out of 5 in Average 1,579 0 Vote(s) - 0 out of 5 in Average 1,354 0 Vote(s) - 0 out of 5 in Average 678 0 Vote(s) - 0 out of 5 in Average 991 0 Vote(s) - 0 out of 5 in Average New Posts Hot Thread (New) Hot Thread (No New) No New Posts Contains Posts by You
2025-04-14This is new in the LRTimelapse 4.3 update:Support for Mac OS X 10.11 “El Capitan” – Apple is introducing major changes to the security model of Mac OS with the upcoming version 10.11 (will be released this fall), so many software will have to be upgraded (currently for example a clean install of Lightroom 5.x is not possible, since it cannot generate it’s user-settings). LRTimelapse 4.3 should consider all those changes now, but currently only a beta of 10.11 is available, so no one knows what else Apple will possibly change… As usual, please provide feedback in the forum, if you experience any problems.LRTimelapse running on OS X “El Capitan” beta 6Fixed problem with simulaneous exports via LRTExport – sometimes when the first part finished, the others were aborted too – this is a major improvement to the stability of the LRTExport plugin if you work with multiple exports in parallel.LRTExport now transfers Exif-Data like Date-Time-Original to the LRT_ intermediary sequences – this was a user requests.Automatically generated filenames by the render module sometimes did not reflect the resolution substring correctly, this has been fixed.Outdated Visual Previews will now be refreshed immediately without first loading the outdated ones, this will save some time when working with the Visual Previews and Visual DeflickerThe “Create Visual Previews” batch operation can now be aborted.Create Visual Previews Batch operation will now take care of outdated XMPs and redo the development for them.Improved importer: processes can now be cancelled, better multitaskingUI: Added “Set Crop Keyframe (*****)” to Main Menu and Popup MenuRenderer could fail when exporting and rendering in original size and the pixel dimensions were not multiples of 8, fixed. Now such sizes will be automatically rounded.When working with incompatible XMP versions (LR3 mode), the Autotransition would crash, fixed. Like I already announced, the support for Lightroom 3 will be ended with the next major version of LRTimelapse (LRT5)“Flat” DNG-Files, that means DNGs made from JPG or TIFF files, would not animate the WB, fixed.I hope you enjoy the new version and the improvements that I’ve made. If so, I’d appreciate, if you spread the word about LRTimelapse!You can download the upgrade straight from the download page.Best wishes, Gunther
2025-04-14