Making Movies & Video Clips With Your Digital Camera
For many people being able to shoot short movie clips is an added attraction
when buying a digital camera. With advances in technology the vast majority
of digital cameras now have a movie facility. It is only digital cameras
at the very low end of the range and professional cameras that are unlikely
to be able to record movies.
If being able to record movies is important to you there are a number
of factors that you need to look out for. All digital cameras are certainly
not equal when it comes to their ability to record video clips.
To assess a digital camera's capabilities for shooting movies there are
five key points to look out for.
-
Duration of Video Clip
The length of time that movies can be shot for is increasing. There
are a number of digital cameras available that can record continuous
movie footage until the memory card is full. Don't get carried away
by this as even high capacity memory cards soon become full when you
are shooting movies. Other cameras are more limited with many standard
digital cameras being able to record around three to four minutes
for each video you shoot.
-
Resolution of Video Frames
The majority of digital cameras will offer you a choice of resolutions
to shoot your movie at. You can select the resolution that you wish
to use with the camera's menu system. Changing the resolution size
has three main effects.
- First the higher the resolution the larger the
picture will appear when played back on a television set or computer
monitor. Shooting at a resolution of 640x480 will provide a full
screen picture. Lower resolutions will cause the picture to appear
only in the middle of the screen.
- Second a number of digital cameras will record
for a longer time when a lower resolution is used. For example a
high resolution of 640x480 may restrict the maximum amount of time
a movie can be recorded for to a minute. Whilst shooting at a lower
resolution of 320x240 could increase the maximum recording time
to three minutes.
- Third shooting at a high resolution creates a larger
movie in terms of storage on a memory card. Therefore the higher
the resolution you use the faster your memory card will become full.
With the advent of widescreen televisions a small number of digital
cameras are now offering a resolution that ensures the movie will
fill the entire screen.
-
Frames per second
The number of frames per second a movie can be recorded at relates
to how smooth the movie will look when it is played back on screen.
The more frames per second a digital camera is capable of recording
at the smoother the movie will be. Cameras capable of shooting at
thirty frames per second produce virtually flicker free movies whilst
lower resolution will result in lower quality videos.
-
Colour or Black and White?
Nowadays the vast majority of digital cameras will capture movies
in colour. It is usually only cameras at entry level that are limited
to black and white footage. Even so check the specification before
you buy to make sure the camera can record in colour. Some cameras
will offer you a choice of colour, black and white and sepia movies.
-
Sound
As with colour it is now highly likely that the movie clip will be
recorded with sound. Again it tends to be at the lower end of the
market that you find digital cameras unable to record sound with a
movie.
There are a couple of downsides that you should be aware of before
you start shooting movies with your digital camera. The first is that
even short movies tend to be heavy users of memory cards. For example
a 1 gigabyte storage card can only capture around fifteen minutes
of movie footage when recording at a rate of thirty frames per second
with a resolution of 640x480.
Another downside is that shooting and playing back movies on the
camera's LCD screen chews up batteries very quickly.
You may notice that some cameras also offer time lapse movies. A
time lapse movie is a series of still shots. When the shots are shown
one after the other they create a movie effect. Time lapse movies
are typically used to record a flower opening or to plot the path
of clouds moving across the sky.
Contact Us: info@BestDigitalCameraGuide.com
BestDigitalCameraGuide.com:
The Best Guide to Digital Cameras
|