What's up man! Yeah this was shit 1080 @ 30 for file size reason but this platform I'm using to edit let's me do 1080 at 60,50,30. Been doing a lot of 720 @ 30fps. And even down to dvd 640. But there I like 640@25fps.....IDK just got that old school vintage feel.
@@1MADZ See, all of that is why I feel 50fps is the most versatile, specifically with a 1/60th shutter speed like I previously explained. You get a high frame rate for smooth vlogs, correct motion blur, due to the combo of 50fps and 1/60th shutter nothing electronic should flicker in any country, you get built-in 2x slow-motion by slowing it from 50 to 25, or dropping it in a 25 timeline in your editing software and interpreting it, or you can just drop half the frames and repeat them for simulated 25fps in a 50fps timeline and have that vintage/cinematic look with just enough motion blur due to the 1/60th shutter speed. All you gotta do is possibly get an ND filter (I rec ND16 if you only buy one, or an ND8 and ND32 if you buy two) and activate shutter priority mode so auto-exposure isn't allowed to change your shutter speed and therefore fuck over your motion blur and anti-flicker compatibility, but that depends on what camera you're using. Also, if you're using an actual camera and not a phone, buying grainy vintage lenses and filming at higher resolutions provides and overall nicer effect than filming at lower resolutions with "perfect" lenses. IDK your setup (phone vs camera, and what _specific_ phone or camera you're limited to, not to mention what editing software you use) but I can send a vid with a specific example of 4k with a vintage lens looking incredibly old school, but with great detail.
@@1MADZ Heh, thanks. I don't have any formal education on the matter, but like ole' Abe Lincoln being a lawyer, I'm self taught and like to consider myself pretty knowledgeable. If you want to know more of the whys and the whats, just let me know. I have both facts AND opinions ready, lol. Though to get into the real specifics, I would need to know what camera setup you're working with and/or how much you're willing to spend money on to upgrade if it's found to be necessary.
So you switched to 30fps? Was 50 taking up too much space?
What's up man! Yeah this was shit 1080 @ 30 for file size reason but this platform I'm using to edit let's me do 1080 at 60,50,30. Been doing a lot of 720 @ 30fps. And even down to dvd 640. But there I like 640@25fps.....IDK just got that old school vintage feel.
@@1MADZ See, all of that is why I feel 50fps is the most versatile, specifically with a 1/60th shutter speed like I previously explained. You get a high frame rate for smooth vlogs, correct motion blur, due to the combo of 50fps and 1/60th shutter nothing electronic should flicker in any country, you get built-in 2x slow-motion by slowing it from 50 to 25, or dropping it in a 25 timeline in your editing software and interpreting it, or you can just drop half the frames and repeat them for simulated 25fps in a 50fps timeline and have that vintage/cinematic look with just enough motion blur due to the 1/60th shutter speed.
All you gotta do is possibly get an ND filter (I rec ND16 if you only buy one, or an ND8 and ND32 if you buy two) and activate shutter priority mode so auto-exposure isn't allowed to change your shutter speed and therefore fuck over your motion blur and anti-flicker compatibility, but that depends on what camera you're using. Also, if you're using an actual camera and not a phone, buying grainy vintage lenses and filming at higher resolutions provides and overall nicer effect than filming at lower resolutions with "perfect" lenses.
IDK your setup (phone vs camera, and what _specific_ phone or camera you're limited to, not to mention what editing software you use) but I can send a vid with a specific example of 4k with a vintage lens looking incredibly old school, but with great detail.
😂WOW DUDE! . THATS KNOWLEDGE! Appreciate it. I'll do a short vlog and try it out soon. Thanks 👍🏿
@@1MADZ Heh, thanks. I don't have any formal education on the matter, but like ole' Abe Lincoln being a lawyer, I'm self taught and like to consider myself pretty knowledgeable. If you want to know more of the whys and the whats, just let me know. I have both facts AND opinions ready, lol. Though to get into the real specifics, I would need to know what camera setup you're working with and/or how much you're willing to spend money on to upgrade if it's found to be necessary.