![]() Ensure that your lights are perfect and that your attention is obviously on point. ![]() Testing: You might want to do a few experiments first before you start and then will take the slow-motion shots.Editors usually have a 24 fps shot, then slow it to 120 or 240 fps. Ramping Speed: To bring a little fun to your edit, you can try a normal *cough* horribly overused *cough* with an editing method called “speed ramping”, where the speed of the picture varies between different frame rates.So, play some good music on the deck to cover the background. Music to use: Slow motion footage either doesn’t record distorted and unusable audio.Using a stabilizer: Slow motion is an excellent way to mask unstable images, but if you’re careful and have used a stabilizer, the images will appear smooth and impressive.Most of the time flicker appears in the background, called a banding phenomenon, so you can use plenty of flicker-free light sources out there or measure the frequency and camera configurations of your light source to ensure you do not produce such a ridiculous strobe effect. Be aware of flickering: You must be cautious about flickering.Make sure that you have sufficient light for your scene to ensure you get the appropriate result. This means the result would come as darker images. Use enough light: You have some lights to show properly, but… what kind of lights do you have? During making the slow-motion video set a proper light, less light will hit your camera sensor.If you shoot at 60 fps, set your shutter speed at 1/120 or nearest and set a shutter speed at 1/140 if you shoot at 120 fps (or whatever is closest). Adjust the shutter speed: Do you want to avoid strange objects and a strange ghost effect while you shoot slow-mo shoot? You must then ensure that your shutter speed is twice as high as your frame rate.
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