jimhare
Second Officer
Flight distance : 239035 ft
Australia
Offline
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Further to my last post, the reason you are getting flicker isn't the shutter speed, it's the framerate itself.
24, 25, or 30FPS isn't enough to capture fast motion. Watch feature films and you will see "flicker" as well. It isn't actually flicker, it's more the staccato articulation of splitting the action into 24 segments. In other words it's completely normal and something we've learned to tune out.
If you do want smooth motion try shooting at 60fps or higher. You will lose the cinematic quality of your footage but the smoothness is very nice.
The audience is split between those wanting smooth motion, which first became common in video games but the aesthetic has spread to video, and those (like me) who much prefer the cinematic quality and escapism of 24fps, where fast motion is more staccato but the image has a beautiful depth to it. |
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