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5

The squares in a row on the right represent the buffer memory of your camera. When you are recording video the data goes roughly as follows: Sensor -> Buffer memory -> Memory card When the last square turns red it means the buffer is full. This is caused by the fact that the buffer memory could not move it's contents to the memory card fast enough. ...


3

So after 8 hours of research, trial and error, I found a successful workflow for .mov footage from my Canon EOS Rebel T3i. The first part is that you can't import .mov "Apple / H264" files with Lightworks without purchasing the "Pro" version. The pro version costs $60 per year (which is actually a good price for what you get). So I bought that and was ...


2

You are correct. You're shooting at a much lower resolution on video than stills, and so your effective circles of confusion are much bigger. So you can get away with glass that a decent stills photographer wouldn't touch. This is speaking from experience at work where I share DSLR equipment with a bunch of stills photographers who are always complaining ...


2

The usual tool recommended for this is JES Deinterlacer, which apparently has an adaptive method of finding and removing the 'smear' frames. I haven't used it myself. The reason this is an issue is that the field cadence used for PF24 is (stupidly, IMO) different from the typical telecine cadence, which is what most 'inverse telecine' algos detect and ...


1

For $300, you aren't going to get good quality audio and good quality video in the same device and for $300 total, you probably aren't going to get them in two separate devices, but it may produce better results than a single device. The problem is that for $300 there really isn't enough funds for both the necessary image processing hardware, a decent ...


1

The reasons for an automatic stop are either reaching the 30 minute limit (thank you European Union video camera tax that ends up impacting what's available to most of the rest of the world), hitting the 4gb file limit (file system limit for the OS on the camera), the sensor is overheating (high usage + temperature) or the buffer is being used up (memory ...


1

No, if the lens is soft while shooting video you will notice. However when shooting any of the Canon Cameras, 5D mark three to be exact, the camera is very susceptible to sharpening in a proper grading software or VFX software, AE can do this, so can Nuke, Flame, Smoke, and many of your color grading softwares. So yes you will notice if the lens is soft in ...



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