This is my photo of a beautiful sunrise at Delray Beach in Florida. Any sunrise can be spectacular, but the surrounding environment is what really enhances the visual story. This is also the key ingredient for the sunrise timelapses I shot.
I have a confession to make about my sunrise photography. I love snapping a beautiful sunrise, but I no longer take tight shots of just the orange fireball. I learned a long time ago that most sunrises look about the same.
The only difference (and it’s a big one) is the cloud formation that may be near the sun. In fact, a great sunrise is always about the clouds and how brilliantly they light up.
Still, zooming in as much as you possibly can to frame in the sun and nearby clouds will get you only part of a particular sunrise’s story. By cropping out the rest of the environment, you’re missing so much more.
Of course, any sunrise should always be the center point of the picture, but it’s just one part of your digital canvas. What else is happening around the early light? If you can show that, then you’re capturing a more complete visual story.
My DJI Osmo 3’s Timelapse Mode I’ve just returned from our family vacation in Delray Beach, Florida. The weather was perfect, and yes, I woke up early enough on a couple mornings to hoof it to the beach to greet the dawn.
As you may recall from my ongoing Maine sunrise photography project on the mudflats of Cape Porpoise, I’ve been focused on creating more timelapses over the past few years. I love shooting sunrise timelapses, because the fast motion reveals the complex and elegant dance of any clouds in the general sunrise zone.
So, I brought my DJI Osmo 3 gimbal camera with its easy timelapse settings to Delray Beach. And let me tell you… the Florida sunrises did not disappoint.
My Osmo’s wide-angle perspective covered much of the beach and the people who gathered early for the grand event. (As you can see in the photo, my Osmo was mounted on my little Joby tripod and tethered via Bluetooth to my iPhone’s screen.)
The Rushing Waves In my first timelapse attempt, I was struck by the mesmerizing quick rhythm of the waves and the rush of people moving about like insects. This 20-second sunrise timelapse ran for 30 minutes.
An Hour-Long Story in 40 Seconds The following dawn, I walked onto the beach and saw a long, dark cloud bank of the horizon, totally obscuring the path of the early sun. Undeterred, I still set up my gear knowing that cloud conditions can change quickly during a sunrise. But I decided to double my recording duration to an hour, since the sun would likely show up a little later, once it eventually rose above the clouds.
Really interesting, right? A lot can happen during an hour on a beach while the sun comes up.
Again, maintaining a wider visual perspective is my key creative choice to capturing a sunrise. Whether snapping a still or a timelapse, showing the broader environment will help you tell the more complete photographic narrative.
A Truly Magic Hour Finally, I’ve got to acknowledge the rush of happiness that accompanies this morning activity. Whether you show up with your camera or you’re just there to experience the start of a day, the experience is hard to beat.
At home, I usually reserve the first hour of my mornings at my desk for my creative pursuits (photo editing, blog writing, AI exploration). I call it my magic hour. But getting up and outdoors to witness true magic for an hour…
This may be a cool image from high in the sky, but some rookie drone flying mistakes nearly grounded my new hobby. Here’s what happened.
You can only watch so many drone tutorials on YouTube before you simply go for it and put your new camera drone in the air. And let me tell you, it’s completely nerve wracking. It’s not a video game to simply reset when you crash. You’re flying with no net.
There are any number of worse case scenarios to guard against. After you fly a drone for the first time, you immediately understand why the promise of flying cars never materialized.
QuickShots are a Joy For my DJI Flip’s first test flights, I stuck to the simpler automated QuickShot maneuvers. These are the auto settings where the drone records preset flying sequences using ‘subject tracking.’I took my Flip to a nearby park with plenty of open space, crossed my fingers and hit the fly button. Happily, these tests were a success, and I brought home some impressive footage.
DJI’s QuickShots’ mode was indeed simple to use, as advertised. But I really wasn’t controlling the drone yet. My DJI Flip was effectively flying itself.
The next step was to attempt manual control.
Then, I Crashed my Drone into a Tree So, I packed my little Flip for our vacation to the coast of Maine in Cape Porpoise. My plan was to use the nearby, vast mud flats as my new training ground.
But before trudging onto the mud flats, I wanted to practice a few more QuickShots in the yard next to where we were staying. And that was a mistake. That’s because the distance limits I had set for my previous park flying tests were still in place, and I had forgotten to reset them.Then, when I executed an automated ‘Dronie’ QuickShot with my friend standing next to me, my Flip shot up and quickly began backing up in the air as it auto-tracked us… and it kept backing up… until it rammed into a tree.
The battery catapulted off the drone’s body, and both pieces collapsed to the ground.
No, the DJI Flip doesn’t have rear-sensing capability. No, I didn’t have enough sense to cancel the auto maneuver before it was too late. It all happened so fast.
The crushing sounds of the tree crash and then ground impact were horrifying.
I stood there, frozen. Staring ahead.
The whole incident took mere seconds, and my flying career was over before it really started. Or so I thought.
My Drone has Nine Lives? I hurried over to the wreckage. There was the battery, and then a few feet away…the drone. Both appeared to still be intact. Huh.
I picked them up and inspected each for damage, but I couldn’t find any.
So, I snapped the battery back in and returned to the launch zone. I looked at my friend. Would this thing still fly? I pressed the button.
My DJI Flip effortlessly lifted into the air as if the past few minutes had been magically erased.
Huh.
The best I can figure, the battery’s ejection had lightened the drone’s weight, thus reducing the effect of ground impact. And the drone’s four propellor guards had protected it from the tree.
I turned to my friend, and I said, “Well that’s nine lives right there.”
A Drone’s Weakest Element is the Human Factor It was painfully clear that even in auto pilot mode, my drone required correct human inputs. I thought the tree was far enough away. I was wrong.
Sure, I’m new to drone flying. And the DJI Flip’s intelligent flying modes are designed to help with this limitation, but it’s not fool proof.
And as I later attempted other vacation flight trials, I was painfully aware how often I felt outside my comfort zone.
I Accidentally Sent my Drone into ‘Orbit’ I shouldn’t take credit for this amazing shot above the mud flats, because it was a complete fluke.
I was simply testing the auto ‘Return-to-Home’ function after I manually flew my drone (very cautiously) a couple hundred feet away down the beach line at a twenty-foot altitude.
Return-to-Home or ‘RTF’ is where the drone automatically flies back to its takeoff point. It’s a handy feature. But I forgot to check the height settings for the return flight. This is an important detail to ensure your drone doesn’t hit any trees on the way back.
Happily, there are no trees to avoid on mud flats. Unfortunately, I had accidentally left the ‘RTH’ height setting unnecessarily high.
My Flip suddenly shot up into the sky to reach the preset altitude for its return across the beach. Then, I quickly lost track of it.
I couldn’t see my Flip anymore. I scanned the sky. My little drone was gone. I began to panic.
But I could still hear its distant whine. I looked down at the screen of my RC 2 remote controller. I was stunned and terrified by what I saw. My drone appeared to be in orbit, and it was beaming back this spectacular view of the coastline.
In hindsight, I recognize this is what the Flip is designed to do. But this wasn’t my plan. It was a bit windy out, and my intention was to keep my drone relatively close.
Searching the Heavens for my Intrepid Companion And then, as if on cue, the wind began to pick up. I could hear my Flip’s overhead whine fluctuate as it struggled to maintain its flight control. A gust hit. Then another.
My adrenaline really began to flow. (I swear I could hear Hans Zimmer music playing in the distance.) What should I do?
I felt the urge to grab back control and to gently lower the drone and fly it back manually. But I wasn’t ready. I didn’t have the skills yet. This was supposed to be just an easy test flight!
I would have to trust the code to bring my drone safely home. And that it did.
I stared at the controller’s screen for what seemed like hours, but the return trip lasted barely two minutes. And the wind was less of a concern than I had feared.Soon, I could see my little flying machine descending from the heavens over me.
Phew.
Everything was just fine. But for those few minutes, I felt totally out of control, though the Flip was in complete control (silly human).
We Still Have a Role in a Camera Drone’s Cockpit The good news is I performed my unintended orbit test at a time when nobody else was out on the mud flats. I wanted to plan for the unexpected. And that’s exactly what I got.
The RTH trip was in fact, not that high in the sky. (The DJI Flip is designed to reach a much higher altitude.) I just wasn’t prepared for this moment. And when I couldn’t see the drone, I freaked out.
It’s worth noting that both of my above mistakes (the tree crash and the orbit maneuver) involved incorrectly setting the boundaries of the auto flight modes.
I thought flying my drone manually would be the toughest part of my Jedi flight training. As it turned out, giving up control to the DJI Force too quickly carried its own risks.
I just didn’t know what I didn’t know. Maybe was time to watch a few more YouTube drone flying tutorials.
I was determined to be better prepared for my next all-manual flight tests on the empty mud flats…