Hello, colleague! I use two cameras with the following settings. GoPro Hero 7 Black: 30FPS, shutter speed 1/60, and an ND filter depending on the light conditions. The other camera is an Insta 360 Ace Pro. I'm testing a few settings with it... One interesting option is 60FPS with a shutter speed of 1/240. However, the video turns out quite dark, and it only works up to an ND 16 filter on sunny days.
number 3 is sick !! well well done love it... anyway i realized everybody talking about motion blur, shutterspeed and so on. But also i realized how important color spectrum we getting from those filters. You can feel more color juice density, smoothnes, but also soft shiny and dark in the same time.
Thanks! I like 3 too but it just seems to have too much blur for my taste when riding. I do love the colors though. Ideally I would do #4 and stabilize it in post but it has a weird warping effect when trying to stabilize wide angle footage.
Hello, I just bought the Insta360 ONE RS and I've struggled to find ND filters for it, apparently they discontinued them and they only make them for the ONE R, I would love to have ND Filters for the RS even if they are non original ones, could you help me source them or give me an alternate solution? Thank you so much, great video!
From their website, the NDs for the One R also work for the RS so you should be fine with those. I’m sure Amazon has a lot of them as well for less like Freewell filters. Thanks for watching!
No problem. You can set the shutter to auto, but unless it's low light it will raise the shutter to very high levels which gives the video a jittery/cell phone look because each frame of video will have very little blur. In order to achieve natural motion blur for video, a "180-degree shutter" method is used. This basically means that you want your shutter to double the frame rate you are recording at. If recording at 24fps, use 1/48 shutter. If recording at 30fps, use 1/60 shutter. For 60fps you will use a 1/120 shutter speed if it's going to be slowed down. The problem with this is action cameras have digital stabilization which needs a high shutter speed to work properly. When set to lower shutter speeds to match the 180-degree rule, it gives the video artifacts that shouldn't be there as reverse motion blur because the camera tries to even out movement by shifting the video in the opposite direction. You can eliminate this by turning off stabilization but then it usually looks too shaky. Auto shutter will always give the best exposure and stabilization but at the expense of motion blur.
@@imrin4059 if you want natural motion blur, yes. If that’s not important then it will just raise the shutter speed to account for the extra light. I shot without an ND filter on it
Hello, colleague! I use two cameras with the following settings. GoPro Hero 7 Black: 30FPS, shutter speed 1/60, and an ND filter depending on the light conditions.
The other camera is an Insta 360 Ace Pro. I'm testing a few settings with it... One interesting option is 60FPS with a shutter speed of 1/240. However, the video turns out quite dark, and it only works up to an ND 16 filter on sunny days.
Thanks for commenting
number 3 is sick !! well well done love it... anyway i realized everybody talking about motion blur, shutterspeed and so on. But also i realized how important color spectrum we getting from those filters. You can feel more color juice density, smoothnes, but also soft shiny and dark in the same time.
Thanks! I like 3 too but it just seems to have too much blur for my taste when riding. I do love the colors though. Ideally I would do #4 and stabilize it in post but it has a weird warping effect when trying to stabilize wide angle footage.
Hello, I just bought the Insta360 ONE RS and I've struggled to find ND filters for it, apparently they discontinued them and they only make them for the ONE R, I would love to have ND Filters for the RS even if they are non original ones, could you help me source them or give me an alternate solution? Thank you so much, great video!
From their website, the NDs for the One R also work for the RS so you should be fine with those. I’m sure Amazon has a lot of them as well for less like Freewell filters. Thanks for watching!
Sir i have a question why we have to set shutter at 1/48 or 1/24 ?? Can you please Explain ??
Why not shutter at Auto ?
No problem. You can set the shutter to auto, but unless it's low light it will raise the shutter to very high levels which gives the video a jittery/cell phone look because each frame of video will have very little blur. In order to achieve natural motion blur for video, a "180-degree shutter" method is used. This basically means that you want your shutter to double the frame rate you are recording at. If recording at 24fps, use 1/48 shutter. If recording at 30fps, use 1/60 shutter. For 60fps you will use a 1/120 shutter speed if it's going to be slowed down. The problem with this is action cameras have digital stabilization which needs a high shutter speed to work properly. When set to lower shutter speeds to match the 180-degree rule, it gives the video artifacts that shouldn't be there as reverse motion blur because the camera tries to even out movement by shifting the video in the opposite direction. You can eliminate this by turning off stabilization but then it usually looks too shaky. Auto shutter will always give the best exposure and stabilization but at the expense of motion blur.
what drone u film with?
I borrowed a DJI Mini 2 from someone to make my intro.
@@BlackRiverRider does its need ND filter for out side?
@@imrin4059 if you want natural motion blur, yes. If that’s not important then it will just raise the shutter speed to account for the extra light. I shot without an ND filter on it