Man has photo taken every day for 30 years - creating 11,000 image timelapse video

  • last year
A devoted dad has turned of photographs taken of his son every day for the last three decades into a mesmerising time-lapse video.

Ian McLeod, 66, started taking pictures of his son Cory from his birth in 1991.

Cory, now 31, continued the routine by taking a selfie every day even when he moved away for university and travelled around the world.

Their combined collection has now been turned into a stunning video charting Cory’s life using almost 11,000 pictures taken between his birth and his 30th birthday.

The eight-minute long clip speeds through pictures of him as a toddler, blowing out candles on his 21st birthday cake and later travelling to more than 60 countries.

Ian initially intended to make a flick book charting the early years of his son’s life, but his labour of love continued into the digital age.

Cory said: “My mum and my dad were very artistic people and they met at art college, so they are creative people.

"He said he had a glass of wine before I was born and he had an idea to make a flick book.

"This was obviously pre-internet and pre-digital so that was all it was going to be.

"Once he got to two years, he thought he would get to three years and then it got to four years and five years and just kept going.

“To me, it's a very unique piece of art and I hope my dad gets some kind of recognition.”

The touching footage documents Cory's schooldays, birthdays, football matches, starting university and even him travelling around Australia.

It also shows him enjoying a family Christmas, starting a new job after moving to Dubai and visiting Tenzing-Hillary Airport, the most dangerous airport in the world.

It comes 10 years after Ian made a similar clip for Cory’s 21st birthday, which became an internet sensation, wracking up more than six million views on YouTube.

Ian, of Harrogate, North Yorks., took on the project thinking he would stick to it for a year or two, but he duly stuck to his routine of taking his son's picture almost every day.

Minor mishaps lead to a couple of gaps in the album, including a whole month's worth of pictures that were lost when the film in his camera wasn't winding.

On another occasion it was stolen during a family holiday in Chile and at other times, the clock slipped past midnight before Ian realised he hadn't taken a picture.

Persistent Ian would make Cory’s teachers take daily pictures on school trips and wake the young lad up in the night if they forgot to take one that day.

While Ian took the pictures in the early days, when Cory moved to Leeds for university and later went to live in Dubai, he continued the family tradition with a daily selfie.

He has now used them in a book detailing the ‘stories behind the photos’.

And he has no plans to stop now he's 'come this far' and thinks he will be the 'first person to do it from birth to death'.

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