u/eric1240 wrote:
[For movies and TV shows 24 frames per second or 30fps is common. Some TV’s can create fake frames for smoother motion, but it’s not always well implemented, and there can be artifacts. People don’t always like it. When I watch YouTube videos I use an application called SmoothVideo Project to render new frames.
…computer monitors and phones typically refresh at 60hz regardless of country. One reason why people might film YouTube videos at 24fps is to match the frame rate movies are recorded and displayed in theaters. However, our phones and monitors don’t work like movie projectors. If your monitor refreshes at 60hz then 24fps mismatches the frame rate. If the frame rate isn’t a divisible number like 30fps or 120fps where frames are either duplicated or dropped then the frame cadence will be off and you will experience judder. Rtings.com has an article about judder. Their article lists TV’s that might be able to compensate for judder depending on the video source. 24fps is evenly divisible with refresh rates like 120hz and 240hz. For 120hz 24fps a single frame would be displayed for 5 refreshes.
…People’s phones, monitors, and TVs are often 60hz or 120hz. Many people stream movies on their computers web browsers which wouldn’t compensate for judder. If people end up watching movies at home more then it’s possible it could make sense to film at least at 30fps so there is no judder.
John also says 24fps might give a less realistic appearance and creates a feeling of fantasy. It’s possible some detachment would be good for things like action films. I wonder if people could get genuine trauma if action scenes are too real.]
r/videography 7/16/22 u/eric1240
My Opinion on Frame Rate, Shutter Speed, Refresh Rate, and LED Flicker
https://www.reddit.com/r/videography/co ... d_refresh/What's the purpose of 24fps instead of 30fps?
Here is an article that should help explain this.
"...most displays have refresh rates of 60Hz
...You are probably watching it on a display with 60Hz refresh. Notice that the motion isn’t smooth. It’s jerky. That’s because to get 24fps to display properly on a 60Hz display, you have to vary the speed. If you do the math, you can figure out that you need to show one frame twice and the next frame three times to get the 24 frames into a 60Hz refresh. This is called 3:2 pulldown. The irregular motion pattern it produces is called judder.
...This problem is all because 60 is not an even multiple of 24. A display with 120Hz refresh can correctly display 24fps footage by showing each frame five times. (120/24=5). That’s the lowest standard refresh rate that works.
Judder gets even worse when you try to integrate 24fps footage into a 30fps production."
http://digifonics.com/24-fps.htmlr/cinematography Purpose of 30fps instead of 24fps?
https://www.reddit.com/r/cinematography ... _of_24fps/jojpol OP wrote:
[What if my display is 240Hz? It is still showing the judder similar to my 60Hz monitor.
I've seen a lot of 24fps videos on YouTube with similar pans, and even though the judder is there, it is a fraction of mine. Are those videographers using different camera settings?
If you shoot at 6K, the rolling shutter readout is not good on the BMPCC 6K. You should use gyro stabilization since it takes the readout speed into account.]
r/blackmagicdesign 12/10/23 u/tu_servilleta
Smooth handheld shots with a BMPCC 6K
https://www.reddit.com/r/blackmagicdesi ... _bmpcc_6k/