this is a great test, but I am wondering what would happen if you shot at a shutter degree less than 180 degrees? seeing the 360 degrees giving more motion blur than the 180, would less than 180 give less motion blur?
there must be some typo. it says 1/24 with 360 degrees angle. 360 = closed. am i missing something or i misunderstood the cinematography book i bought?
yes, uhmn.....the more Frames Per Second the more movement is registered, "slow motion" cameras can shoot up to thousands of fps, they don´t miss a thing. Higher shutter speeds, like 1/100-1/2000, won't give you smoother slo mo, au contraire, the movement will be very cropy/jerky. Most video camcorders shoot at 30fps so there's not much to do abou it, as jaackSCH alredy told mid shutter speeds(1/60-1/48) produces more motion blur as they capture more movement.....
thanks now I understand !
YW1969 1 month ago
@digitalnow that wasn't implied here
zombieX111222333 1 month ago
shutter speed and shutter angle are two different things.
digitalnow 6 months ago
@brockAnd Its not the amount of rotation that causes the blur, it's the speed at which you rotate.
calisaetia 10 months ago
this is a great test, but I am wondering what would happen if you shot at a shutter degree less than 180 degrees? seeing the 360 degrees giving more motion blur than the 180, would less than 180 give less motion blur?
brockAnd 1 year ago
there must be some typo. it says 1/24 with 360 degrees angle. 360 = closed. am i missing something or i misunderstood the cinematography book i bought?
RestDayer 1 year ago
for normal or standard shooting. shutter speed should be set at double the frame rate.
ozakistudios 1 year ago
yes, uhmn.....the more Frames Per Second the more movement is registered, "slow motion" cameras can shoot up to thousands of fps, they don´t miss a thing. Higher shutter speeds, like 1/100-1/2000, won't give you smoother slo mo, au contraire, the movement will be very cropy/jerky. Most video camcorders shoot at 30fps so there's not much to do abou it, as jaackSCH alredy told mid shutter speeds(1/60-1/48) produces more motion blur as they capture more movement.....
RodrigoElGatoNegro 2 years ago