does somebody know how to look up wich shutter time and aperture was used in a 5D's video? i cant find this infos in the exif data of the videos i shoot ..
@RedLineTZ Not possible as far as I know, because these things could change during the video depending on the camera settings you're using. If it's important to you I guess you could take a note of it before you start shooting each clip.
in the manual is written that the data of shutter and aperture is stored in the video info but only the settings used when the video was started (obviously .. if you change settings during recording you wont see that).
nice video! ! , I tried this and as soon as I put my shutterspeed anywhere near 1/2000 I get black bands moving horizontaly on the screen? am I doing something wrong?
@mrJoestar99 That would be down to your lighting. You'd have to work with a number which is a factor of your countries electric frequency. normally 50hz for UK and 60hz for USA. This is why its a good idea to use Magic Lantern for a better range of shutter speeds to eradicate this problem.
I thought the Mark II would not allow you to change the shutter speed when making movies but only allow you to move from either 30 FPS to 24 FPS. How do you change the shutter speed like you have here?
@meltdownman1 this was added in the newer firmwares; you need to put the camera into Tv (shutter priority) mode, and then you can adjust shutter speed as necessary. The camera will then adjust aperture and ISO automatically.
unfair test. when you changed shutter speed from 1/2000 to 1/60 your picture's luminance was the same( you expose every image to the light longer, so they have to be much brighter). it means that the camera lowered ISO (means less noise). your test shows how much less noise you have with lower ISO, not about shutter speed.
I was looking for the way the water was going to move at the two shutter speeds. The water is much more stuttered in @ 1/2000 and at 1/60 the movement is much more fluid in the slower motions but blurred when it is faster.
Can you explain to me why having the exposure values different would affect a test of shutter speed? I mean I understand that the shutter speed controls the amount of light etc.. but I am trying to understand?
This is Canon? What a ugly noise fotage...
Anton1987RU 7 months ago
thank you. that was a very good test! :)
graffitiskater111 7 months ago
I would think shooting at a high shutter speed is Very Good for high motion shots. That way you can actually tell whats going on.
dimension2793 7 months ago
hi!
does somebody know how to look up wich shutter time and aperture was used in a 5D's video? i cant find this infos in the exif data of the videos i shoot ..
thanks a lot!
RedLineTZ 8 months ago
@RedLineTZ Not possible as far as I know, because these things could change during the video depending on the camera settings you're using. If it's important to you I guess you could take a note of it before you start shooting each clip.
cromozoneg13 8 months ago
@cromozoneg13 hmmm .. strange...
in the manual is written that the data of shutter and aperture is stored in the video info but only the settings used when the video was started (obviously .. if you change settings during recording you wont see that).
thanks a lot for the help!
RedLineTZ 8 months ago
nice video! ! , I tried this and as soon as I put my shutterspeed anywhere near 1/2000 I get black bands moving horizontaly on the screen? am I doing something wrong?
mrJoestar99 1 year ago
@mrJoestar99 That would be down to your lighting. You'd have to work with a number which is a factor of your countries electric frequency. normally 50hz for UK and 60hz for USA. This is why its a good idea to use Magic Lantern for a better range of shutter speeds to eradicate this problem.
AleksandrsLV 9 months ago
im kind of new, but how did you change the shutter speeds like that with almost no difference in light???
because usually it makes the picture much lighter when changing it to lower speed?
c0ll1z10n 1 year ago
very nice, would like to see some more footage at 1/1000 exposure
InfiniteSword 1 year ago
a-zum camera!
karatewooh 1 year ago
1/2000th looks more filmic ;)
LikeAVideo 1 year ago
Newbie so go easy on me,
I thought the Mark II would not allow you to change the shutter speed when making movies but only allow you to move from either 30 FPS to 24 FPS. How do you change the shutter speed like you have here?
The Meltdownman
meltdownman1 1 year ago
@meltdownman1 this was added in the newer firmwares; you need to put the camera into Tv (shutter priority) mode, and then you can adjust shutter speed as necessary. The camera will then adjust aperture and ISO automatically.
cromozoneg13 1 year ago
@cromozoneg13 Thanks Cromo for the very quick response. I for one appreciate that very much...love the demonstration and have a great weekend.
The Meltdownman
meltdownman1 1 year ago
Mm very good example!! Really showed what I was looking for.
Thanks for the upload!
mishbot 1 year ago
Nice.
Motionart13 1 year ago
unfair test. when you changed shutter speed from 1/2000 to 1/60 your picture's luminance was the same( you expose every image to the light longer, so they have to be much brighter). it means that the camera lowered ISO (means less noise). your test shows how much less noise you have with lower ISO, not about shutter speed.
shiksastudio 1 year ago
@shiksastudio
What does the luminance have to do with it?
I was looking for the way the water was going to move at the two shutter speeds. The water is much more stuttered in @ 1/2000 and at 1/60 the movement is much more fluid in the slower motions but blurred when it is faster.
Can you explain to me why having the exposure values different would affect a test of shutter speed? I mean I understand that the shutter speed controls the amount of light etc.. but I am trying to understand?
mishbot 1 year ago
very cool!
So we should use slower shutter speed or faster?
videoer2006 2 years ago
The grain doesn't look that bad at all at 3200!
escalatorman 2 years ago
Yeah not too bad - pretty useable anyway :-)
cromozoneg13 2 years ago
very cool
hottyhollett 2 years ago