I've been enjoying this match-cut style of photography for the last few years. I generally shoot timelapses and hyperlapses but wanted to give this treatment to the Barbican finally. I use grids and other features on the screen to line up the frames, this leads to a trippy in-camera effect.





by Matjoez

16 comments
  1. I love this, please post the video when you stitch it all together

  2. This is great! It reminds me of the music video for Weval – Someday

  3. This reminds me of some of Chase and Status’s video clips. It should go really well with a DnB song imo.

  4. You did all that and you got to keep your camera. It’s a good day

  5. Wow, that looks like so much more than an hours worth of clicking! Well done!

  6. Having done [The Barbican architecture tour](https://www.barbican.org.uk/whats-on/2025/event/architecture-tours) this week, this is very timely and very cool!

    (Would 100% recommend the tour – I am not into architecture per se, but do like “interesting” places – it was super interesting and there are loads of little things in those photos that I was told about how they came to be included in the place)

  7. Amazing! I love walking around the Barbican, it would be cool to see how it changes at night.

  8. Interested to know how this is achieved, how you keep the angle the same each time when moving etc? Great stuff

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