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Learning
Videography
Very basic questions, noob at video
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<blockquote data-quote="eurotrash" data-source="post: 157941" data-attributes="member: 9237"><p>Hi.</p><p></p><p>So I have a D7K and plan on shooting (both literally and in context of video) a .50 cal BMG at an object loaded with tannerite at the range this weekend (big gun + big bullet + volatile substance = big boom!)</p><p></p><p>I know that I probably won't be able to capture the actual bullet travel, and that's not my objective. I'm mainly trying to capture the actual shot and the resulting explosion from various angles with various cameras. After the video is shot, I want to slow down the video a lot so it gives it some dramatic impact as well. </p><p></p><p>My question is, should I be worrying about shutter speed or should I simply put the cameras at the highest frame rate possible so I can slow it down later in post? </p><p>Has anyone ever taken video something like this before?</p><p></p><p>I'm unfortunately limited to 30fps on my camera I believe, so..</p><p>Thanks!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="eurotrash, post: 157941, member: 9237"] Hi. So I have a D7K and plan on shooting (both literally and in context of video) a .50 cal BMG at an object loaded with tannerite at the range this weekend (big gun + big bullet + volatile substance = big boom!) I know that I probably won't be able to capture the actual bullet travel, and that's not my objective. I'm mainly trying to capture the actual shot and the resulting explosion from various angles with various cameras. After the video is shot, I want to slow down the video a lot so it gives it some dramatic impact as well. My question is, should I be worrying about shutter speed or should I simply put the cameras at the highest frame rate possible so I can slow it down later in post? Has anyone ever taken video something like this before? I'm unfortunately limited to 30fps on my camera I believe, so.. Thanks! [/QUOTE]
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Very basic questions, noob at video
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