Finally. Someone has explained this in a way my brain can comprehend. Thank you so much you have removed lots of confusion and frustration around this subject.
this is THE BEST way to explain shutter speed for dummies. I can't believe that you only had 550 likes.... now it has 551 likes. Good intro, good examples, nice outro music. keep it up!
Brilliant explanation! I've been doing photography for 15 years, and never knew why you would want to change the shutter speed on Video! Now, I've bought a 4K drone and will probably be getting into some video. Thanks to this video, I will not be producing overly crispy footage. I also know the value of ND filters for video as well (to keep the shutter speed down). Thanks mate!
Hi. I checked your playlist and most of your videos are under under 10 minutes - the reason I am now subscribed to your channel. Please keep it short and sweet whenever you can. Thank you.
Greatly explained video on an important aspect of capturing video! I know it was a tricky thing to grasp when I was starting and didn't know why my footage looked off. Thanks for a simple, straightforward and easy to understand video!
Really great video! One quick note: you should absolutely shoot with a 180degree shutter to get natural looking footage, but only up to 30fps. When you shoot 60fps and deliver in real time with a 180 degree shutter you'll get the more frantic look(60fps/125th). Instead for 60fps footage you should shoot with a 360 degree shutter (60fps/1/60th) to get the most natural looking motion blur. Motion blur isn't corelated to the relation between fps and shutter. Try it and grab a still. thank me later👍
@@The_Daliban Thank you very much. The event is tomorrow and we will be welcoming a WWII Spitfire into an aviation museum. I am very familiar with how to photograph these but the facility asked me to take a video as well. I, actually my son, will use a Gopro 8 mounted on a gimbal and I couldn't decide which shutter speed to use. After your video the concept became clearer and I will go for a 1/60 shutter. Seems it would be cloudy day and I think I won't have any problems. Thank you very much for the tip.
Such an amazing music in the end of the video! Thanks for the tips! Watching your videos is like reading a blog post about all these valuable information, but within a such didactic manner that you're able to deal with!! I have discovered your channel from a collab you did with "Dunna Did It" (which I saw randomly as suggested video) and I gotta say your videos are top quality, I hope you grow as fast as possible! One tip, though, is to vary the angles of your camera DURING the video, so you add an extra surprise element for whoever is cautiously watching all the valuable information you're sharing! Providing unexpected elements into your video will hold even more the viewers' attention! Your scripting is awesome though, very nice way of storytelling!
@@RealJamesArcher It's just a tiny suggestion, because I believe that even changing the camera position within your already existing desk setup for different scenes of the same video would already implement the surprise element for the viewers. Your videos aren't only informative, they're entertaining to watch. A lot of information released in a light manner, without overwhelming the mind, because of your awesome storytelling.
Loved how simple this was and the diagram really brought it home for me. Thank you very much! As a fairly new shooter (on a full frame and manual setting camera) its reassuring to me that i can move the shutter up to what seems like 1/100 and still be in a fairly safe space. Glad to know i am lean on this added onto a higher aperture and with a polaries (that isn't working as hard as an ND filter would) on a really sunny day.
I'm a little worried about the shutter speed of 4000 in 4k with my Sony zve10 Can it do any damages to shutter ? I mean something is moving 4 thousand times in one second that's why I'm worried about it
Istant subscribe!! I feel like that was literally perfect!!!!! You taught me everything I needed. I can tell you are a true expert because you don't just throw out random terms - you break it down and really show us. Thanks for your content. I'm glad I stumbled across your stuff. :)
Very nice video. I watch car racing and have noticed that some cameras located around the track look smoother than others, and this is the exact reason! The smoother cameras have that creamy shutter speed which looks nice with fast motion and helps blur the background a bit more under fast motion.
Hey James, thank you for this video and explanation! I recently took my Nikon z6 camera out to film some cars parked at the car meet. Totally stationary objects. But since it was outdoors and it was a very bright sunny day I had to lower my shutter speed to like 1/1250 while setting ISO to Auto to make sure some parts of the cars (that were in shadows) were still visible. Unfortunately, I don't have a ND filter yet. I'm still thinking which one to get. Please could you make a similar video about how to shoot slow-motion videos.
Thanks for the feedback! In a situation like that, shooting in a compressed profile (like LOG) can help as well because it'll let you capture everything and then stretch it back out when color correcting so you can hopefully preserve the highlights and the shadows. It can get a little noisy sometimes but works pretty well when you get the hang of it. I do want to do a video on slow motion (thanks for the suggestion!). One quick tip is to increase the shutter speed so it's about half of the (faster) framerate. So if you typically shoot 24fps at 1/50, your slow motion might be 60fps at 1/120 or 120fps at 1/250. That way the shutter's open about half the time, which should create roughly the desired motion blur, even in slow motion. Hopefully that helps!
@@RealJamesArcher Thank you for reply! During last 2 weeks I build my rig and got a variable ND filter. I started shooting at 24p at 1/50 shutter speed. Everything is nice, but after investing in all that stuff I recently decided to try doing photos and then stitching it together like in my recent video here on YT. The reason is the weight of the whole rig. My back really dies after several hours of carrying a rig in my arms when I'm doing run and gun shooting at a local car meets. And when I just do photos it saves me a lot of energy and I really enjoy doing photos. I may do videos with my rig but normally at car meets all cars are stationary, thus I don't really need to shoot video clips, so photos work well in my case. Here is how I stiched my photos: ua-cam.com/video/qIUZ10HZBBQ/v-deo.html
Thank you so much, got Footage to cut from someone external, and I was wondering why it feels so jittery when I slow down the clips. Now I know whats up. He is constantly moving the Camera on a Gimbal, I cant use the slowmotion which is kinda sad.
On the Sony FX6 there is also the option 'no shutter' what is the use of this and how does it relate to your explanation of slow and fast shutter speeds?
as long as the shutter doesn't drop double my frame rate i will still shoot in aperture priority. turning your nd filters continuously takes away your focus on what you're doing
Can someone please clarify this for me? The only way a shutter speed of 1/120 for 60fps will have a “normal” looking motion blur, is if you slow that 60 down in post to 24. Same with shooting under 24fps at something like 12fps with a shutter speed of 1/24. The only way that motion blur will look “normal” is if you speed that up in post to 24fps?
Like you can’t just shoot in 1/120 60fps and deliver in 24fps and leave that footage at the speed it was shot in and except it to match the same motion blur as if you were to of shot in 1/48 24fps?
"Better" is relative. 😄 I'd start at 120 and increase from there if needed to achieve the look you want. (Motion blur can help things look faster, while lack of it can make things seem more energetic/frenetic. Just depends what you're going for.) Also, keep in mind your camera's sensor and processor limitations. Lower settings can sometimes result in better footage because the camera's not straining as much.
*_Please help..._* I use a Canon DSLR (the Canon 1Dx Mark II) to shoot video. I am in Australia, where we use the PAL system. It runs at 24fps and I use a shutter speed of 1/30th of a second. My videos are outputted (from a Canon .MOV file) to a MP4. The video clips always looks a little choppy from time to time, like some of the frames are missing, resulting in a subtle 'jerky' or dis-jointed' look. Is this normal? Should I use a faster shutter speed, like 1/50th? Or a slower one (like 1/25th) to smooth out any jerkiness? Help!
It's hard to know without more information, but it sounds like the framerate could be changing somewhere along the way, maybe between what you're shooting and what you're editing. If you check out my video about framerate, bitrate, and resolution, it may have some clues for you.
@@RealJamesArcher thanks for your input. I think I've figured it out... I use 1920 x 1080 25fps PAL files from my Canon DSLR camera and I was rendering / outputting them as 16Mbps *_24 fps_* MP4 files. Switching to *_25 fps_* MP4 files seems to avoid those jittery stutters!
As long as I don't have to follow the "record everything in 24/30fps because I'm stuck in the old ways for no reason and I'm poor to not afford more storage for high fps recordings" guy.
Finally. Someone has explained this in a way my brain can comprehend. Thank you so much you have removed lots of confusion and frustration around this subject.
Came here to say this haha
What do u choose? Double the frame rate or no?
I was gonna start my comment saying "finally" as well. X2 will suffice...
Exactly this. Let's be weird together he said.
Like most other people commenting… I FINALLY understand what shutter speed actually does. You did a great job explaining this. THANK YOU!
The simple graphic explained perfectly what is going on. Thank you.
I’ve watched so many videos on shutter speed and this video finally explained it in a way that clicked instantly. Thank you!
why have i only just learned this. im nearly a year into my uni film course and no ones explained these things this clearly. ty
this is THE BEST way to explain shutter speed for dummies. I can't believe that you only had 550 likes.... now it has 551 likes. Good intro, good examples, nice outro music. keep it up!
Thanks, I appreciate it!
Brilliant explanation! I've been doing photography for 15 years, and never knew why you would want to change the shutter speed on Video! Now, I've bought a 4K drone and will probably be getting into some video. Thanks to this video, I will not be producing overly crispy footage. I also know the value of ND filters for video as well (to keep the shutter speed down). Thanks mate!
Absolute champion when it comes to shutter speed explanation.
You my friend made a video that has genuinely helped me understand shutter speed. Thanks man. Liked and subscribed as well
Hi. I checked your playlist and most of your videos are under under 10 minutes - the reason I am now subscribed to your channel. Please keep it short and sweet whenever you can. Thank you.
Thank you for making it short and sweet.
Finally someone said something more than: you should put it twice your frame rate ❤
Greatly explained video on an important aspect of capturing video! I know it was a tricky thing to grasp when I was starting and didn't know why my footage looked off. Thanks for a simple, straightforward and easy to understand video!
Thanks, Kevin! I've definitely had my share of weird-looking footage over the years as well, so I'm happy to be able to pass this tip along!
Really great video! One quick note: you should absolutely shoot with a 180degree shutter to get natural looking footage, but only up to 30fps. When you shoot 60fps and deliver in real time with a 180 degree shutter you'll get the more frantic look(60fps/125th).
Instead for 60fps footage you should shoot with a 360 degree shutter (60fps/1/60th) to get the most natural looking motion blur. Motion blur isn't corelated to the relation between fps and shutter.
Try it and grab a still. thank me later👍
Exactly, the key point of the video is incorrect. Shutter duration in isolation defines amount of motion blur, not the ratio with fps.
That's the info I've been searching for quite a time... I plan a 4K 60 fps video and I want the propellers of the plane to be blurred. Thank you.
@@BogacErkan i recommend 1/60 if you deliver 60fps. Try it before you go on the shoot and see if you are happy with the result. Hope it helps🙏🏻👍🏻
@@The_Daliban Thank you very much. The event is tomorrow and we will be welcoming a WWII Spitfire into an aviation museum. I am very familiar with how to photograph these but the facility asked me to take a video as well. I, actually my son, will use a Gopro 8 mounted on a gimbal and I couldn't decide which shutter speed to use. After your video the concept became clearer and I will go for a 1/60 shutter. Seems it would be cloudy day and I think I won't have any problems. Thank you very much for the tip.
dude i raise my shutter to 346 looks great!! it all depends on your camera
Wow, I just randomly found this dude, and I love him. Subscribed.
This dude loves you too! ❤️
Such an amazing music in the end of the video! Thanks for the tips! Watching your videos is like reading a blog post about all these valuable information, but within a such didactic manner that you're able to deal with!! I have discovered your channel from a collab you did with "Dunna Did It" (which I saw randomly as suggested video) and I gotta say your videos are top quality, I hope you grow as fast as possible!
One tip, though, is to vary the angles of your camera DURING the video, so you add an extra surprise element for whoever is cautiously watching all the valuable information you're sharing! Providing unexpected elements into your video will hold even more the viewers' attention! Your scripting is awesome though, very nice way of storytelling!
Thanks for the feedback! I'm a bit constrained due to family/house logistics, but I'll work on mixing up those angles!
@@RealJamesArcher It's just a tiny suggestion, because I believe that even changing the camera position within your already existing desk setup for different scenes of the same video would already implement the surprise element for the viewers.
Your videos aren't only informative, they're entertaining to watch. A lot of information released in a light manner, without overwhelming the mind, because of your awesome storytelling.
Loved how simple this was and the diagram really brought it home for me. Thank you very much!
As a fairly new shooter (on a full frame and manual setting camera) its reassuring to me that i can move the shutter up to what seems like 1/100 and still be in a fairly safe space. Glad to know i am lean on this added onto a higher aperture and with a polaries (that isn't working as hard as an ND filter would) on a really sunny day.
Perfect explanation video. Loved the rhythm and all the useful examples. Thanks so much, man.
Thanks for watching! 🙌
your content is gold. just the fundamental things for a starter. many thanks
Dang I’ve been shooting wrong this whole time! This cleared it up and was explained very well!
I'm a little worried about the shutter speed of 4000 in 4k with my Sony zve10
Can it do any damages to shutter ?
I mean something is moving 4 thousand times in one second that's why I'm worried about it
Istant subscribe!! I feel like that was literally perfect!!!!! You taught me everything I needed. I can tell you are a true expert because you don't just throw out random terms - you break it down and really show us. Thanks for your content. I'm glad I stumbled across your stuff. :)
Glad it helped!!
Man, even in the examples I just like higher shutter speed. Guess I like it to look intense
This is the best shutter-speed-explaining video i've seen
1:09 Thank you! This diagram explains everything super well!!n
Oh shit ! You just giving the answer of my big confusion. Thanks a lot
Best explanation of this topic I've ever seen!
Great video...good humor and you didn't spend 20 minutes giving us 4 minutes of information! Thanks!
Very nice video. I watch car racing and have noticed that some cameras located around the track look smoother than others, and this is the exact reason! The smoother cameras have that creamy shutter speed which looks nice with fast motion and helps blur the background a bit more under fast motion.
personally, high shutter speed for me, the most important thing to me is to preserve as much detail as possible
By far, the best explanation.
Brilliant work mate
Great video James thank you for your time explaining all of this.
Thanks for the comparison shots ! Everyone talks and explains and... Math 😝 this made it very easy to comprehend 🙏
Thank you for an informative video that isn't 25 minutes long
Touché !
Very good explanation with frames coverage by shutter opening time. Leve it! Thanks!
Love the way you explained these general principles in a easy way to understand🙏🏼
Great video. I've been falling the rules and never understood why
Thanks, I needed a clear, no nonsense explanation!
simple, short, and clear. thanks
The Into sold me XD
Great video! Easy to understand, even for beginners.
Great explanation. Simple, concise, clear.
Excelent explaination with samples, kudos to you!
The most informative and the answers/demos I needed.
Best explanation I ve seen. Good job
Exlampes are perfect. Thanks a lot!
Underrated video. Really good examples.
just wanted to thank you for this awesome explanation you did very well
Thank you so much James for this shutter speed explanation.
Nicole, thanks for watching! Glad it was useful.
That’s excellent, it finally makes sense, thank you !
Great video. Need an ND filter
this is pure gold
Thanks, Simone!
Damn, that was a perfect explanation.
Exactly what I was looking for.... Thanks 😊
Excellent James thank you!!
Clear and to the point. Bravo !
beautifully explained, very good job!
To the point video. Thanks a lot man
Clear explanation for beginners. Thanks!
Great explanation. Thank you.
Oh my god this helps so much thank you
Appreciate the examples. Thank you!
learned so much from this. thx
Thanks a lot James, that was super helpful!
amazing. it was helpful
Thanks
I'm intrigued. I wonder if 50fps coupled with a shutter speed of 1/150 would produce the crispiest image while side-stepping the staccato motion.
well... the wedding... it did turn into a Jason Bourne fight scene... but for reasons unrelated to my camera config... 😢
your videos are so helpful
well made mate 😎
Thanks, this was the first time when I actually understood the nature of what the rule is about.
I noticed that rolling shutter also is effected by this
Thank you
Brilliant video , so shooting in 60 fps I can go higher then the recommended double of 120/125 on shutter speed ?? Thanks
Hey James, thank you for this video and explanation! I recently took my Nikon z6 camera out to film some cars parked at the car meet. Totally stationary objects. But since it was outdoors and it was a very bright sunny day I had to lower my shutter speed to like 1/1250 while setting ISO to Auto to make sure some parts of the cars (that were in shadows) were still visible. Unfortunately, I don't have a ND filter yet. I'm still thinking which one to get. Please could you make a similar video about how to shoot slow-motion videos.
Thanks for the feedback! In a situation like that, shooting in a compressed profile (like LOG) can help as well because it'll let you capture everything and then stretch it back out when color correcting so you can hopefully preserve the highlights and the shadows. It can get a little noisy sometimes but works pretty well when you get the hang of it.
I do want to do a video on slow motion (thanks for the suggestion!). One quick tip is to increase the shutter speed so it's about half of the (faster) framerate. So if you typically shoot 24fps at 1/50, your slow motion might be 60fps at 1/120 or 120fps at 1/250. That way the shutter's open about half the time, which should create roughly the desired motion blur, even in slow motion. Hopefully that helps!
@@RealJamesArcher Thank you for reply! During last 2 weeks I build my rig and got a variable ND filter. I started shooting at 24p at 1/50 shutter speed. Everything is nice, but after investing in all that stuff I recently decided to try doing photos and then stitching it together like in my recent video here on YT. The reason is the weight of the whole rig. My back really dies after several hours of carrying a rig in my arms when I'm doing run and gun shooting at a local car meets. And when I just do photos it saves me a lot of energy and I really enjoy doing photos. I may do videos with my rig but normally at car meets all cars are stationary, thus I don't really need to shoot video clips, so photos work well in my case. Here is how I stiched my photos: ua-cam.com/video/qIUZ10HZBBQ/v-deo.html
really great video!
Thank you so much, got Footage to cut from someone external, and I was wondering why it feels so jittery when I slow down the clips. Now I know whats up. He is constantly moving the Camera on a Gimbal, I cant use the slowmotion which is kinda sad.
congrats on this video
Jason bourne fight scene was a amazing analogy lol
Subbed. Great video.
is there any way to make some thing that’s already been shot creamy appear crispy?
If I shoot at 60FPS what’s the recommend shutter speed to get the fast jittery look like a action movie scene
great video thanks bro
So if I want to shoot at 60fps and want it crispy, do I shoot at 1/120?
спасибо, очень хорошо объяснили!
Great video
Super Video. Many thanks man, we are now weirdos together. I feel so much weirdoer now. 😂
On the Sony FX6 there is also the option 'no shutter' what is the use of this and how does it relate to your explanation of slow and fast shutter speeds?
Very helpful
as long as the shutter doesn't drop double my frame rate i will still shoot in aperture priority. turning your nd filters continuously takes away your focus on what you're doing
diagram was perfect.
Guatemala?? Nice
Very useful video
Great video. very easily explained, you have a new friend Forever :) :)
Can someone please clarify this for me? The only way a shutter speed of 1/120 for 60fps will have a “normal” looking motion blur, is if you slow that 60 down in post to 24. Same with shooting under 24fps at something like 12fps with a shutter speed of 1/24. The only way that motion blur will look “normal” is if you speed that up in post to 24fps?
Like you can’t just shoot in 1/120 60fps and deliver in 24fps and leave that footage at the speed it was shot in and except it to match the same motion blur as if you were to of shot in 1/48 24fps?
Great video, thanx. What would you say shutter should be, if i shoot action/sport at 60fps. Is it better to go heigher than 120?
"Better" is relative. 😄 I'd start at 120 and increase from there if needed to achieve the look you want. (Motion blur can help things look faster, while lack of it can make things seem more energetic/frenetic. Just depends what you're going for.)
Also, keep in mind your camera's sensor and processor limitations. Lower settings can sometimes result in better footage because the camera's not straining as much.
@@RealJamesArcher great info. Thank you 👌
*_Please help..._* I use a Canon DSLR (the Canon 1Dx Mark II) to shoot video. I am in Australia, where we use the PAL system. It runs at 24fps and I use a shutter speed of 1/30th of a second. My videos are outputted (from a Canon .MOV file) to a MP4. The video clips always looks a little choppy from time to time, like some of the frames are missing, resulting in a subtle 'jerky' or dis-jointed' look. Is this normal? Should I use a faster shutter speed, like 1/50th? Or a slower one (like 1/25th) to smooth out any jerkiness? Help!
It's hard to know without more information, but it sounds like the framerate could be changing somewhere along the way, maybe between what you're shooting and what you're editing. If you check out my video about framerate, bitrate, and resolution, it may have some clues for you.
@@RealJamesArcher thanks for your input. I think I've figured it out... I use 1920 x 1080 25fps PAL files from my Canon DSLR camera and I was rendering / outputting them as 16Mbps *_24 fps_* MP4 files. Switching to *_25 fps_* MP4 files seems to avoid those jittery stutters!
good one thank you a lot
So if we translate it to shutter angle, higher shutter angle number = more creamy, lower shutter angle = crispy ?
Yep!
Kewl thanks 🙏🏽
Awesome explanation and graphics. Creamy is such a weird word
Haha it truly is, but weird words are the best!
As long as I don't have to follow the "record everything in 24/30fps because I'm stuck in the old ways for no reason and I'm poor to not afford more storage for high fps recordings" guy.