Have you ever stopped to smell a flower and wished you could see it grow from seed to bloom? Can you spend hours watching the clouds make their way across the sky? Thanks to photographers who painstakingly photograph or video a complete cycle and shorten it into a time-lapse video you can see so much in just a few minutes. Check out these gorgeous time-lapse videos.
Take a 5-minute tour that captures the beauty of some of the USA’s most gorgeous natural spaces by night and by day.
Watch stunning footage of flowers blooming. A perfect reminder of the new life of spring.
See amazing footage of the movements in the sky.
The stunning diverse often stark landscapes and geography as shot by photographer Stian Rekdal. He combined c. 3,500 photos from 40,000 he took while spending 3 weeks on the road, covering 3,000+ miles.
A stunning reminder of how vast our universe is.
Clouds, storms, rainbows and rain – just in case we forget that Mother Nature’s power isn’t just about beautiful things that grow and live.
Can’t afford a vacation this year – take a trip around the world courtesy of this video.
Because there’s no place like home.
Of course, birds build nests so they can lay eggs and make baby birds.
Have you ever wondered what goes on in and around a coral reef? Now you know, thanks to this footage of the Great Barrier Reef.
Be mesmerized by the power of the ocean waves as it sculpts the geography of a beach.
The artist took 40,000 photographs to make this epic story.
If only it could happen this quickly in real life!
This should inspire you to want to see the Aurora borealis for yourself.
This film is to convey the impression New Zealand left on an émigré in the first 30 days after they moved to Queenstown.
Ready to be made more aware of the threat’s to our planet’s environment. This is sobering footage.
This video of a garden in Virginia captures the 48 hours of the 2016 Blizzard that hit the east coast between January 22 and 24, 2016.
From devastation, hope springs eternal.
Watch as three-foot nemertean worms and carnivorous sea stars prowl the bed of the Antarctic Ocean in search of flesh. When they find a dead seal, the sea stars inject it with digestive juices ... then suck it up like soup.
Very gross but utterly fascinating.
And from decay and death to birth and life.