Hey everyone. So today I bought the T3i! And 75-300 mm lens! Im excited! Just one thing though. How do I get the best picture out of this camera? What should the shutter speed be for 24 fps and 30 fps? What about Magic Lantern? Thanks
Sorry I meant should I get Magic Lantern?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w8BzeZEGEYY
This was the most helpful tutorial to me.
His voice is annoying lol
Personally I like the look of 24p at 1/100 shutter speed
What NLE are you using, and where are the soon-to-come videos going to be seen?
If on youtube know that computers display at 29.97FPS, so... you might as well start shooting at the closest approximation = 30FPS, and adjust your shutter speed accordingly: 2X FPS = 1/60.
http://documentation.apple.com/en/cinematools/usermanual/index.html#chapter=2§ion=5&tasks=true
Furthermore, your NLE will probably limit a project's output, which again will be constrained by its final output source, most often being a computer or digital equivalent.
You may shoot in 24FPS + 1/50 shutter speed and edit @ 24FPS in the NLE, but odds are most people are going to see whatever it is on a computer which will delay frames to that 29.97 NTSC standard, thus, once again - shoot and edit @ 30FPS + 1/60SS (unless, of course, you're going to do some slo-mo, in which case you'll shoot @ 60FPS + 1/125SS.
Love it.... I have Sony Movie Studio Platinum 12.0. But I have only used it once and I didn't like it. (editing is hard)
75-300mm lens is not very ideal for movie purposes, I could not manage using that kind of lens.
I have 17-70mm lens myself and most of the time I do not use 70mm at all, but of course this depends of your style.
DSLR cameras are great and they are not so hard to learn after all so good luck![]()
Magic Lantern is great. It's only as complicated as you want to make it. The simple operations are easy to find and figure out.
As for shooting flat - install the Technicolor Cinestyle profile.... It works like a charm!
What NLE are you using, and where are the soon-to-come videos going to be seen?
If on youtube know that computers display at 29.97FPS, so... you might as well start shooting at the closest approximation = 30FPS [...] You may shoot in 24FPS + 1/50 shutter speed and edit @ 24FPS in the NLE, but odds are most people are going to see whatever it is on a computer which will delay frames to that 29.97 NTSC standard, thus, once again - shoot and edit @ 30FPS + 1/60SS