Quick story: I'm still playing with Sony's uber-troubled NX70U, which tends to shoot at very high shutter speeds in daylight. I've been trying to run some tests to see at what point shutter speed becomes unacceptably high, and for what kinds of motion, and I'm realizing there's a huge range of variables here.
Start with the fact that NX70U has an electronic shutter, that it shoots to digital media via AVCHD rather than film, that anything I ever shoot with it will be viewed on some sort of computer screen or computer projection.
I find myself wondering if Sony didn't bother making it possible for the NX70U to shoot at say 1/48s at 24p in daylight because digital just isn't equivalent to shooting and projecting film. Maybe shutter speeds of 1/250 are perfectly fine given digital media, even for shooting moving objects and pans. Maybe chasing the film look is a fool's game from the start with digital--not even taking into account the fact that viewers are increasingly used only to digital.
Anyone else out there pondering what shutter speeds are appropriate in the digital age?
Start with the fact that NX70U has an electronic shutter, that it shoots to digital media via AVCHD rather than film, that anything I ever shoot with it will be viewed on some sort of computer screen or computer projection.
I find myself wondering if Sony didn't bother making it possible for the NX70U to shoot at say 1/48s at 24p in daylight because digital just isn't equivalent to shooting and projecting film. Maybe shutter speeds of 1/250 are perfectly fine given digital media, even for shooting moving objects and pans. Maybe chasing the film look is a fool's game from the start with digital--not even taking into account the fact that viewers are increasingly used only to digital.
Anyone else out there pondering what shutter speeds are appropriate in the digital age?