Comments

Erk wrote on 9/20/2002, 10:03 AM
Are you talking about slow-motion? Film vs. video? Overall quality of the video?

G
kkolbo wrote on 9/20/2002, 10:30 AM
What you are seeing on TV is probably stuff that was shot on 35mm film originally. You can never get exactly the same thing on video.

I have found though, and people will think I am joking, but if I slightly underexpose the video and then reduce the contrast slightly, my PD-150 produces a remarkably similar look to film.
Sr_C wrote on 9/20/2002, 10:35 AM
julio5150,

Like kkolbo states, the look you want is a result of the original footage being shot on film. Do a search on this forum for "Film Look" and you will find many helpful tips on achieving this look. -Shon
Finster wrote on 9/20/2002, 1:01 PM
If you have control over shutter speed, try shooting at 1/6Oth of a second instead of higher speeds. This is "film rate" and adds a little motion blur to make things look more "natural." Personally, I almost never increase shutter speed unless I want slo-motion or still frames from the video, but many consumer camcorders will do so without being asked. With some cameras in bright light you may need to add/or dial-in a neutral density filter to get proper exposure.