Recorded on my Sony Action Cam with Settings: 1080p 60 fps. Then made some parts in Slow Motion.
[video=youtube;7XqbdN_hBo8]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7XqbdN_hBo8[/video]
What do you think? Is it too slow for 60 fps or too fast? Smooth or not?
Thank you.
60 frames isn't really that great to work with when it comes to slowmo, try to get a hold on a GoPro camera which records at at least 100 fps.
You should also consider having a more interesting shot for when you want to slow down stuff.
Also, if possible you could try to disable the resampling, as it doesn't do this video any justice.
I seriously didn't notice any slow motion.
Ok, I think you got dumbed because you didn't properly edit the footage. 60fps will look way smoother than that. And it doesn't help not much happened, to show it off.
What software are you using to edit it with?
What's with the weenie-hut-juniors dubstep there?
What's up with that blurry effect? Is it Youtube? Is Frame Blending on or something? The quality isn't very good
[QUOTE=t h e;44565402]What's up with that blurry effect? Is it Youtube? Is Frame Blending on or something? The quality isn't very good[/QUOTE]
It's due to the editing program. The project likely wasn't setup right. That's why you see that ghosting on most videos.
-snip-
[QUOTE=berdyev;44564832]Recorded on my Sony Action Cam with Settings: 1080p 60 fps. Then made some parts in Slow Motion.
[video=youtube;7XqbdN_hBo8]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7XqbdN_hBo8[/video]
What do you think? Is it too slow for 60 fps or too fast? Smooth or not?
Thank you.[/QUOTE]
A: disable resampling (i assume you're using sony vegas, right click on the video blade, select properties, and bubble in "disable resample")
B: ctrl+click and drag on a video blade in vegas to slow it down. you can propagate the effects to the audio track as well by right clicking, selecting properties, and bubbling in "lock to stretch"
C: the bits that were slowed down were very hard to notice, and they looked rather poor. this is partly due to the presence of resampling, but a huge factor that isn't helping you very much is youtube's limit on video framerate, which is 30. you can slow down footage at 60fps, but the frames inbetween that make it look smooth will most likely be dropped (i think the latter is what happened in this video, the parts that were slowed down appeared significantly more choppy in the sense of seeing dropped frames when compared to the rest of the video)
You could have at least picked a better track to go with the video, made me cringe.
D: Shave
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