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Many of the people I knew then who worked with video also switched to 24fps when they made the move to shooting HD. Quite a few still stuck with the UK standard 25fps, though.

Have you switched to 24fps? Do you shoot 60fps? What about 3D or VR? Do you find the faster framerates like 60fps offer a better viewing experience? Let us know your thoughts in the comments. John Aldred is based in Scotland and photographs people in the wild and animals in the studio. You can find out more about John on his website and follow his adventures on YouTube. I saw some old film footage on YouTube recently that someone ran through a de-noise filter, image stabilized and most disturbingly interpolated to 60fps with Twixtor or some such software.

It was awful and felt nothing like film. That was some editing bullshit back in the day. Actually this is not quite accurate. But at the same time the frame format lines x 25 frames was set long before Color TV standards were set.

The main driving force was image flickering. As the video correctly points out the main reason for selecting frame rate was the interference from power source. As result Europeans had to run at 25Hz frame rate. The problem was that at 25Hz lines are not close enough to produce stable picture.

They had to increase the number of horizontal lines. This corrects for video frames that occur at a rate of What is the difference between 24 fps and 30 fps? Typically 30fps is used for news shows, and 24fps is used for films.

When you look at the two, 30 is a bit more "real" but also less "cinematic" as a result. I prefer 24fps for all my work, and the company I work for does too. What is the difference between The difference between the two is exactly as it says, 30 fps is 30 frames per second, so every second of video, there would be thirty still frames, or pictures.

In the case of What is In order to properly fit the 24fps of film into a So What is the frame size for HDTV? Often the number of horizontal pixels is implied from context and is omitted, as in the case of p and p.

Even if you do use the oddball frame rates, every film printing company can cope with it. But the conversion these days between Stick to This is happening as we speak The codec develped by Cinegy Cinegy Daniel2 is a game changer to the post-prod workflow. It is a open source codec, ultra eficient, based on GPU image processing witch bring a whole another level in terms of image processing Current GPUs deal, with ease, 8k footage!!

This is a massive improvement to all the small production companies, this is a solution that gives the best! Just want to spread the word about this!

I ask the community to embrace the idea of new. If it wasnt for these leaps in technology Choose your information. Be wise about the information you choose.



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