Hi there great video. Quick question, you were talking about switching your fps so you can use a lower shutter speed. Can you combine 60 fps and 30 or 24 fps in the same video (as in the finished product)?
Thanks! Yes, it all depends on your main output project frame rate - e.g. a 24p project can have 24, 30, 60fps, etc. footage whether slowed down or normal speed.
Exactly what I learnt the hard way to solely prime on the Sony system because these are the situations I shoot. The debate of zoom vs prime is silly to me now. It depends on what you shoot
nice video and footages. I would be interesting by tutos/masterclass how you setup a7rv for such events (wedding dance floor and concert) and retouch (premiere ?)
Thanks Marc! I'm actually working on another wedding BTS as we speak. I'm also available for consults to cover specific a7R V setups, other topics, etc.🙂
I don‘t get it. I dont‘t get noise free image from my a7RV nor my ZV-E1 at the second base ISO ( 2500 / 12800) on PP8. I expose both of them at +1.7. as it is the comon rule to expose slog3. But there is visible noise in the shadows.
The available light in your scene can still play a role, but color grading (e.g. your Rec 709 conversion process, being sure to crush shadows a bit) and other factors could contribute as well.
if you're shooting at 60, it is perfectly allowable to use a longer shutter like 1/60. I promise that the sky does not fall down if you dare stray from the old and outdated 180 shutter.
@@andrewsaraceni This may apply to sports, but if you are shooting a romantic video at a wedding where everything is slow, then a 1/60 shutter speed at 60 FPS will not give a lot of blur to the image when you then slow it down to 30 FPS because the objects are moving slowly.
@@Plotnikovfoto If you have a still subject, you could probably get away with it. With any human motion/movement, and especially if you're slowing down the footage, the motion blur will not align with what the human eye expects to see. Even with workarounds in post (e.g. Optical Flow in FCPX), you're taking a risk.
The concert footage looks phenomenal.
Thanks Mark! The a7R V with the 50mm f1.2 GM is a beautiful combo.
Your videos are always so insightful! 🙏
Thanks Kevin, I really appreciate that!
Thanks for all the great info, it'll come in handy when I film a wedding coming up soon.
No problem David, good luck with the wedding!
Hi there great video. Quick question, you were talking about switching your fps so you can use a lower shutter speed. Can you combine 60 fps and 30 or 24 fps in the same video (as in the finished product)?
Thanks! Yes, it all depends on your main output project frame rate - e.g. a 24p project can have 24, 30, 60fps, etc. footage whether slowed down or normal speed.
Exactly what I learnt the hard way to solely prime on the Sony system because these are the situations I shoot. The debate of zoom vs prime is silly to me now. It depends on what you shoot
Exactly, the "primes vs. zooms" debate always comes down to the situation, what you really need/value on a shoot, etc.
nice video and footages. I would be interesting by tutos/masterclass how you setup a7rv for such events (wedding dance floor and concert) and retouch (premiere ?)
Thanks Marc! I'm actually working on another wedding BTS as we speak. I'm also available for consults to cover specific a7R V setups, other topics, etc.🙂
I don‘t get it. I dont‘t get noise free image from my a7RV nor my ZV-E1 at the second base ISO ( 2500 / 12800) on PP8. I expose both of them at +1.7. as it is the comon rule to expose slog3. But there is visible noise in the shadows.
The available light in your scene can still play a role, but color grading (e.g. your Rec 709 conversion process, being sure to crush shadows a bit) and other factors could contribute as well.
if you're shooting at 60, it is perfectly allowable to use a longer shutter like 1/60. I promise that the sky does not fall down if you dare stray from the old and outdated 180 shutter.
As long as you're not intending to slow the footage down later (or shooting S&Q in camera), then yes, that's generally fine.
@@andrewsaraceni This may apply to sports, but if you are shooting a romantic video at a wedding where everything is slow, then a 1/60 shutter speed at 60 FPS will not give a lot of blur to the image when you then slow it down to 30 FPS because the objects are moving slowly.
@@Plotnikovfoto If you have a still subject, you could probably get away with it. With any human motion/movement, and especially if you're slowing down the footage, the motion blur will not align with what the human eye expects to see. Even with workarounds in post (e.g. Optical Flow in FCPX), you're taking a risk.