It's worth pointing out that the speed that a video was orginally recorded at, is very important when slowing a clip down. A clip recorded at say 24fps will slow down poorly, as there simply aren't enough frames available to make the resulting clip (after slowing down) look smooth; it will look choppy. Using a higher recorded framerate of let's say 60fps will allow for smoother slow downs as there more frames to work with. This is why if you intend to slow a clip down (slow motion), you should always record at as high a framerate as you can. If you have no intention of slowing a clip down, 24fps is going to be fine. So think about this when filming.
I like what you did very nice.
Thank you! 😊
It's worth pointing out that the speed that a video was orginally recorded at, is very important when slowing a clip down. A clip recorded at say 24fps will slow down poorly, as there simply aren't enough frames available to make the resulting clip (after slowing down) look smooth; it will look choppy. Using a higher recorded framerate of let's say 60fps will allow for smoother slow downs as there more frames to work with. This is why if you intend to slow a clip down (slow motion), you should always record at as high a framerate as you can. If you have no intention of slowing a clip down, 24fps is going to be fine. So think about this when filming.
I never thought of using ''Selected Range''. Now, after seeing your video, I'm definitely going to use it. THANKS.
Glad I could help!
Really useful that. I wondered how to speed up sections of my videos. Well now I know. Thank you.
Happy to help!
Very informative ! Thank You. By the way only 9 needed for 400 !!!!
So close!