Emrys Roberts
April 2nd, 2009, 02:52 PM
Hey Everybody,
I'm looking for some advice. I recently hired a fellow videographer in the UK. He produced some great footage for me of one of our project sites out there. The main reason I decided to use his services was because he had an EX1 with the capabilities to shoot in NTSC. That way we wouldn't have any crazy conversion issues going from PAL back to NTSC for me to edit with.
Sure enough the footage imports perfectly, except one draw back. Because of the different power frequencies between the UK and the US, we now have a flicker or phasing happening in the image whenever he had to shoot inside (basically whenever unnatural lighting occurs).
Does anyone know of a technique I can use to reduce or eliminate this from the footage he gave me?
Also, would it be a better option to just have him shoot 25f rather than 30f? What's a good technique to translate that footage back to NTSC?
Thanks in advance for any help on this :)
I'm looking for some advice. I recently hired a fellow videographer in the UK. He produced some great footage for me of one of our project sites out there. The main reason I decided to use his services was because he had an EX1 with the capabilities to shoot in NTSC. That way we wouldn't have any crazy conversion issues going from PAL back to NTSC for me to edit with.
Sure enough the footage imports perfectly, except one draw back. Because of the different power frequencies between the UK and the US, we now have a flicker or phasing happening in the image whenever he had to shoot inside (basically whenever unnatural lighting occurs).
Does anyone know of a technique I can use to reduce or eliminate this from the footage he gave me?
Also, would it be a better option to just have him shoot 25f rather than 30f? What's a good technique to translate that footage back to NTSC?
Thanks in advance for any help on this :)