Aaron Hucker
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Im just wondering if anyone has any tips or suggestions on how to reduce the amount of rolling shutter (jello) when panning fast on a long lens (200-400mm)
I'm shooting some very fast moving objects close to the ground so there is definitely some things that are static in the shot (the background)
I've notice that as the shutter speed increases the effect of the rolling shutter also increases (straight lines like buildings hit almost 45 degrees depending on how fast I must track the object.) Its even more noticable as I am often shooting in 2k at 96 or 120 fps.
Im just wondering if anyone has any suggestions because I like how crisp single frames are for this shoot at higher shutter speeds, but i'd be willing to sacrifice the higher shutter speed for less jello in my shots.
Thank you in advance, and sorry for my lack of ability to explain this properly.
Aaron
I'm shooting some very fast moving objects close to the ground so there is definitely some things that are static in the shot (the background)
I've notice that as the shutter speed increases the effect of the rolling shutter also increases (straight lines like buildings hit almost 45 degrees depending on how fast I must track the object.) Its even more noticable as I am often shooting in 2k at 96 or 120 fps.
Im just wondering if anyone has any suggestions because I like how crisp single frames are for this shoot at higher shutter speeds, but i'd be willing to sacrifice the higher shutter speed for less jello in my shots.
Thank you in advance, and sorry for my lack of ability to explain this properly.
Aaron