Thursday, February 4, 2010

24 Fps Video Camera Video Framerate Why 24 FPS?

Video framerate why 24 FPS? - 24 fps video camera

Can someone explain why the 24 should be fps, it's filmed somewhere on the Internet examples of recordings in more than 24 frames per second?

Not that having 24 FPS camera and say, 40 frames per second, and shows me that means everything very quickly that the camera uses the film faster than 40 fps for life to appear faster or slower than good time is the true life, but at 40 fps instead of 24th

I do not mean exactly 40 years ago, but a number greater than 24 years.

3 comments:

avomatic said...

24 fps is the original standard for movie cameras, before this rule, manufacturers choose their own frame rate, so that the first silent films seem to run very fast. when turned the television, American Standard chose 30 frames per second, rather, 29.97fps. The United Kingdom has chosen 25fps PAL, and developed French, has the SECAM standard, even at 25 fps. Movies can always fps with 24, and DVD player both 24fps, telecine, as known, and 29.97, many of them can read and PAL units.

A faster pace is the picture to act fast to be caught without "motion blur", but makes the video more affected by camera shake, diminishes the quality of individual images. That is why it is so obvious is when a TV movie shot in the film in color and high contrast and a show that is recorded on video, is rich, it looks a little cleaner, and "e". The most important programs, such as television, plays with a combination of video and film.

Flash modern multi-camera shoot from 60 frames per second, but it is recommended the ideal lighting conditions.

Rugratzz... said...

Europe uses the PAL TV system (not France), which plays at 24 fps. United States and others use the NTSC is 29.97.

Perhaps the most obvious links

http://www.animemusicvideos.org/guides/a ...

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frame_rate


Good reading

RR
OOPS! Teaching me to read what I wrote LOL

Iridflar... said...

PAL is 25 fps, not 24 FWIW, SECAM is also at 25 frames per second. 24 frames per second for the film has become a de facto standard in the 1920s, but no specific reason for these 24 - take a look at the link for more information.

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