+GranVlog Haha yeah, I also have shoulder rig set up for really smooth shots. These were just a few quick shots we ran out and got, I wasn't trying to make them really smooth
Mark Sandoval The best results will come from shooting and exporting in 24. There are less frames but they are blurred together more so it flows better and that's the standard for cinema these days. You can easily search it online if you want a more detailed explanation. :)
Nick DeBoer thanks for the instant reply :) yes that's right most cameras this days are shooting at 30fps or 60fps I'm shooting all videos at 60fps so I can slow motion some of them down. However if I export to 24fps will it look much better? Can we really see the difference within the human eye
For sure you can. I would honestly export at 60 if thats what you shot it at unless you plan on adding motion blur. The problem is that it'll look "Skippy" cause their will be no blur at all. Here is an example of 60 exported as 60 and 24 exported as 24 (Keep in mind that 24 has more motion blur because there's more time in between frames.) ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-WyvUIA7KUjc.html
ill check it now :), i shot my footage at 60fps, my timeline is 60fps, (i do have some clips to use to slow motion up to 30-50%), surely exporting at the same 60fps will be a bad idea? since i have those clips i have slowed down, how ABOUT exporting the final video to 24fps? from a source of 60fps timeline and video?