• Marlosh
    #51
    Hat te nagyon eltevedtel:)
    "There are three main frame rate standards in the TV and movie making business.

    * 60i (interlaced; 50i in Europe and Australia) is the standard video field rate per second (60 interlaced fields = 30 frames) that has been used for television for decades, whether from a broadcast signal, rented DVD, or home camcorder.

    * 30p, or 30-frame progressive, is a non-interlaced format and produces video at 30 frames per second. Progressive (non-interlaced) scanning mimics a film camera's frame-by-frame image capture and gives clarity for high speed subjects and a cinematic-like appearance. Shooting in 30p mode offers video with no interlace artifacts.

    * The 24p frame rate is also a non-interlaced format, and is now widely adopted by those planning on transferring the video signal to film. But film- and video-makers turn to 24p for the "cine"-look even if their productions are not going to be transferred to film, simply because of the "look" of the frame rate.

    35 mm movie cameras use a standard exposure rate of 24 frames per second."