
How cities evolve with images
When we walk through the cities we do not realize the real transformation and city evolution that we step on. It is a characteristic that few have enough time and patience to catch those moments and turn it into a different look, into an observer's look at the container we inhabit.
The Australian photographer and filmmaker Keith Loutit can affirm that he is a man with a lot of patience and more, if we look at that after three years of the launch of his first video The Lion City returns with a second series with the project The Lion City II - Majulah.

Three years of constantly collecting photographs from the same places in the city of Singapore (Also called Majulah) reported a total of 1,000,000 Million of images that optimizing their quality and adjusting sizes created an excellent video.
Rescue the most dazzling moments of the growth of the city and transform them into a timelapse of architecture and the development of the unforgettable urban landscape.
According to the Singapore-based photographer, location hunting and experimentation started in January 2013 and ended in May 2013. The actual shooting was from June 2013 to June 2016. In full, the shooting lasted more than 500 days.
"I could have kept the shoot longer, but at some point you have to draw a line in the sand and release the work for others to see", He said.
In September 2012, Mr. Loutit published his first Lion City video, which was very well received in the online world.
The filmmaker has other works based on the timepalse technique (Photographic technique that consists of taking the same images from the same position in constant time intervals), such as the unforgettable The City Of Samba that we can see below …
"The aim of my work is to help people see their environment as if it were the first time," says… Mr. Loutit.
A different way of facing the evolution and changes of a city from a little-known perspective.
We remember that at the time we made an article on 17 architecture timelapses to get a different look at the spaces, cities and buildings of the world.
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