With its imposing mountains, endless plateaus and echoing valleys, Norway is a country where nature takes the lead. Using time-lapse, this film attempts to capture the ebb and flow of the seasons and is a result of one year of planning, a second year of shooting and four months of editing.
20,000 kilometers have been travelled, 200,000 photos taken and 20 terabytes worth of hard drives filled. Months have been spent hiking through the mountains, sleeping in tents and travelling through the entire country hunting for the best locations.
SEASONS of NORWAY is shot and edited by Morten Rustad. The video is available in up to 8K resolution (7680*4320 letterboxed).
In this DROPS video we show how to crochet a star stitch pattern back and forth.
You start by crocheting an uneven number of chain sts.
You need a minimum of 7 ch for 1 star, 9 ch makes 2 stars, 11 ch makes 3 stars and so on. On our sample we ch 13 for 4 stars.
Row 1 (RS): pick up 5 sts starting in 2nd ch from hook = 6 sts on hook, make a yo and pull through all 6 sts, ch 1 which creates a hole on top of the 6 sts, *pick up 1 st in the hole, 1 st in the side of the last st of 6 sts, 1 st in the same ch as the last st of 6 sts was picked up in, 1 st in each of next 2 chain = 6 sts on hook, make a yo and pull through all 6 sts, ch 1*, repeat *-*. Make 1 htr in last ch.
Row 2 (WS): ch 2, work 2 htr in “each star hole”, end row with 1 htr in last st.
Row 3: ch 3, pick up 1 st in 2nd and 3rd chain from hook, 1 st in first 3 sts on row = 6 sts on hook, make a yo and pull through all 6 sts, ch 1, *pick up 1 st in the hole, 1 st in the side of the last st of 6 sts, 1 st in the same st as the last st of 6 sts was picked up in, 1 st in each of next 2 sts = 6 sts on hook, make a yo and pull through all 6 sts, ch 1*, repeat *-*. Make 1 htr in last ch.
Repeat row 2 and 3 for star pattern.
You can find this video in many more languages, as well as search within all DROPS knitting and crochet videos here: http://www.garnstudio.com/video.php?lang=en
Find thousands of free knitting and crochet patterns here: www.garnstudio.com
These tips will help you to make a template for your newly uploaded YouTube videos. If you want to be more productive while uploading new videos to YouTube, watch this video!
If you want to be more productive and also to have more engaging videos on your channel, you need to ramp up the descriptions of your videos you upload to YouTube!
In this YouTube description tutorial, I will show you some useful YouTube tips, especially for beginners, on how to set the video description template and how to optimize YouTube descriptions. Learn some YouTube description tips and tricks right away!
YouTube offers a great feature to set default descriptions to uploaded videos, which will be filled in automatically to newly uploaded videos, which can be modified afterwards.
First of all, you’re just going to log in to YouTube, come down to your creator studio, go to channel, and then upload defaults. And this is where you set everything you want to be a part of every single video that you upload. If you have some default text you always want to be added to every video, you can do this using the method shown in this video. I hope this helps!
🤔 ABOUT CODEREVOLUTION TV 😃
Hello, I’m Szabi, a 32 years old guy living with my wife and our beautiful 4 year old daughter Maya. I started my journey in WordPress plugin development back in 2017, when I quit my programmer job and became a full time stay at home WordPress plugin developer, entrepreneur, blogger and also daddy. Since then, I implemented over 100 WordPress plugins, earning my full time income from them.
I started this YouTube channel to share tutorials for my plugins with people who are using them, however, since then, the channel has evolved into a daily VLOG, besides of tutorials for my plugins, I am sharing here also my insights about how to be a successful entrepreneur in our current times.
I really enjoy finding problems and solving them using creative and easy to use solutions to make life easier, this will reflect also in this YouTube channel!
On this YouTube channel, you will see a new video published each day at 7 PM GMT! If you don’t want to miss my videos, subscribe and hit the bell notification also!
Check out my website and blog for news and tutorials on how to earn a passive income from the internet and how to build your online business ► https://coderevolution.ro/
▶ GEAR I USE IN MY VIDEOS 👇
Microphone: Samson Go Mic (Great quality, Budget price): https://amzn.to/2GvwCjW
▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬
To your success,
Szabi – CodeRevolution.
DISCLAIMER: The information contained on this YouTube Channel and the resources available for download/viewing through this YouTube Channel are for educational and informational purposes only.
This description may contain affiliate links. If you purchase a product through one of them, I will receive a commission (at no additional cost to you). I only ever endorse products that I have personally used and benefited from personally. Thank you for your support!
In this DROPS video we show how you can bind off your work from the wrong side.
On the wrong side you bind off the same way as from the right side, but the stitches are purled before they are passed over each other. When 1 stitch remains, cut the thread, and pull yarn through last stitch.
You can find this video in many more languages, as well as search within all DROPS knitting and crochet videos here: http://www.garnstudio.com/video.php?lang=en
Find thousands of free knitting and crochet patterns here: www.garnstudio.com
Video overviews reflect current feature functionality in Canvas; they are updated based on workflow changes, not on minor or non-functional interface enhancements. Depending on your institution’s Canvas theme, the Canvas interface may display differently than shown in this video, but the functionality is the same.
SOARING is a shortfilm showing what is keeping many photographers sleepless through the winter nights in the arctic landscapes and rural areas of northern Norway; the northern lights. The film was shot this autumn from late august to mid november in and around the areas of the city of Tromsø, as well as on the beautiful island of Senja.
All sequences are realtime video, no timelapse used. This film shows the auroras how they really are in real world, not like in most timelapses where they flicker in ridicilous speeds over the screen. Most of the time auroras move really slow and majestically. However, occasionally when you have a strong display they may move really fast, way to fast to be reproduced by timelapse. This video contains some of the wildest auroral displays I have witness in my life in the skies over Tromsø. These displays could never have been presented as they were without realtime video. Even realtime video with framerate of 25fps is struggling to keep up at times with the fastest displays.
The camera used for this was the Sony A7s, with various lenses. Just to answer a few questions I know will come; yes the camera is good in low light, however do not expect magic, there is still noise when you really push it. You still need to plan your shots accordingly to light-conditions.
Pans achieved with the Dynamic Perception Stage One. www.dynamicperception.com
Steadyshots done with the DJI Ronin.
Sadly there has been very little snow so far this early winter so lot´s of dark and challenging scenes in here, however if foregrounds become dark, auroras become very easily viewable in a dark snow-less November night. Been trying to use silhouettes for what they are worth. Traditionally I have released these short films by the end of the season (March/April), but by October I already got tons of footage from this awesome season, so I decided to drop a short compilation now. What you´re seeing here is just a fraction, and I am already working on a new production, which in addition to a lot of aurora shots, also will include a lot of other shots and exciting ideas. Stay tuned.
Check out my previous projects here:
vimeo.com/92382021 – SILENT STORMS (2014)
vimeo.com/64122803 – POLAR SPIRITS (2013)
vimeo.com/40555466 – CELESTIAL LIGHTS (2012)
vimeo.com/21419634 – LAND OF NORTHERN LIGHTS (2011)
Commercials:
vimeo.com/82181786 – HOME OF THE NORTHERN LIGHTS (2013)
vimeo.com/68924195 – HUNTING THE LIGHT (2013)
More info about me:
www.arcticlightphoto.no
fb.com/arcticlightphoto
Music: Tony Andersson – Seeds (Extended mix by me allowed by Tony, thanks Tony)
Licensed from: The Music Bed
themusicbed.com
A special thanks to:
Thorbjørn Riise Haagensen
Helge Mortensen
Frank Kræmer
Anders Hansen
Ole
For licensing inquires, please contact me at: www.arcticlightphoto.no/contact
Xiuhtezcatl Roske-Martinez is not your average 14 year old. He is mobilizing his army of teens in over 50 countries to demand greener policy from world leaders.
Learn how you can help spread his message.
www.EarthGuardians.org
It’s no secret that just about anywhere you go in the Netherlands is an incredible place to bicycle. And in Groningen, a northern city with a population of 190,000 and a bike mode share of 50 percent, the cycling is as comfortable as in any city on Earth. The sheer number of people riding at any one time will astound you, as will the absence of automobiles in the city center, where cars seem extinct. It is remarkable just how quiet the city is. People go about their business running errands by bike, going to work by bike, and even holding hands by bike.
The story of how they got there is a mix of great transportation policy, location and chance. You’ll learn quite a bit of history in the film, but essentially Groningen decided in the 1970s to enact policies to make it easier to walk and bike, and discourage the use of cars in the city center. By pedestrianizing some streets, building cycle tracks everywhere, and creating a unique transportation circulation pattern that prohibits vehicles from cutting through the city, Groningen actually made the bicycle — in most cases — the fastest and most preferred choice of transportation.
It does feel like bicycle nirvana. When I first got off the train in Groningen, I couldn’t stop smiling at what I saw around me. In an email exchange with my friend Jonathan Maus from Bike Portland, he described it as being “like a fairy tale.” This jibed with my first thought to him — that I had “entered the game Candyland, but for bikes!” In fact, for our teaser I originally titled this Streetfilm “Groningen: The Bicycle World of Your Dreams,” before I talked myself out of it. Although there is a magical quality about being there, in reality there is nothing dreamy or childlike about it. With political will and planning, what they have done should and can be done everywhere.
In our Streetfilm you’ll see the 10,000 (!) bicycle parking spaces at the train station, some of the incredible infrastructure that enables cyclists to make their journeys safer and quicker, and you’ll hear from many residents we encountered who go by bike just about everywhere they travel. But as one of my interview subjects, Professor Ashworth, wanted me to point out: the three days I was there were bright and sunny, and the hardy people keep up the bicycling through the cold winters. As with many bicycling cities, there area also big problems with cycle theft, and residents are always yearning for more bicycle parking.
I think most of us would trade some of those problems for a city with 50 percent mode share (and up to 60 percent in the city center!!).