You guessed wrong
Motion blur is usually controlled by frame rate.
"Realistic" motion blur has nothing to do with resolution.
Shoot 4K at 24fps and stick a nice ND filter (8, 16, 32). In post you can soften the image to taste.
I am not trying to start a fight. If you are happy with your result then that is all that matter but no manufacturer will make what you are suggesting because it makes no sense.
I live in Tucson and would love to take some videos of the mothballed/ deceased planes. Did you have to get special permission or just fly over the fence?
I think it is possible with the right connections. But do not fly over the fence into a military base.I live in Tucson and would love to take some videos of the mothballed/ deceased planes. Did you have to get special permission or just fly over the fence?
Just new at this recording stuff....whats the best all around Shutter speed and frame rate with what ND filter #
I WOULD LOVE TO have an ND filter in a form of a Gimbal Globe Cover!
Please someone make it!
It would not interfere with gimbal movements, would be easy to install and would serve as extra level of protection -just like the current cover does.
It would be cool to have few of these gimbal covers made out of quality plastic: clear, ND8, ND16, ND32
I'm not a drone expert by any means but I have been a serious hobbyist photographer for 15 years. Just FYI, if you are trying to get high quality footage, the last thing you want to do is put plastic of any quality in front of your lens. You should look for "optical quality" glass and to do that in the shape of the gimbal cover would be prohibitively expensive.
You can buy individual filters on ebay ... I bought PGYTech. Easy to install, with no start-up issues. They ship from China, so a wait is in order, though.Does anyone just sell a single filter? I need one for snow, but everyone has filter packs for sale.
I'd actually like to try the DJI ones as they seem light and easiest to install, but shipping times are pretty long so I'm guessing they are not actually shipping yet.
Impressive scenery!ND Filters will lower shutter speed while leaving color neutral.
ND/PL Filters will lower shutter speed and also reduce glare and increase color saturation (so they alter the color profile a bit)
Some people prefer to shoot ND only, some enjoy the benefits of the ND/PL. I shoot with our ND8/PL and ND16/PL a lot of the time because I like the increased color saturation and reduced glare.
Here is an example of what the ND/PL's look like:
-Jeff
Hey, i know thats topic is quite off but maybe u are still here and can't answer me... If iam using during sunny days ndfiltr16 and using ur settings i still have very darky video what i can do/change?I use manual because it locks the settings in for a particular scene.
Pick the lowest ISO possible, then use the ND filter which brings your shutter speed down to apx 2x your frame rate.
I.E. for 30fps you would want your filter to produce around 1/60 sec.
For rule of thumb, use an ND32 for bright snow or sand scenes, an ND16 for most bright scenes and an ND8 for dimmer or shade scenes.
If you are removing/replacing your filters with the gimbal off, and well supported, you wont damage your gimbal. I am assuming you are using the lightweight "leave on during start" type of filters.
I use my ND16 the majority of the time.
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