Bang on. That's why I quite like interlaced TV - the perceived refresh rate is 
higher.


 
With Best Wishes,


Roger Shufflebottom


>________________________________
> From: Lee Menningen <[email protected]>
>To: [email protected] 
>Sent: Sunday, 28 October 2012, 22:57
>Subject: RE: [AP] Multiple Frame Rates and Resolutions Issue
> 
>
>  
>Roger, you raise several interesting points also raised by others. There
>have been reports of movie-industry people who studied frame rate effect on
>viewers and are actively developing higher frame rate technology (one
>article says a group has experimented with many rates and is now pursuing
>240fps as a compromise). Their motivation is based on an obvious inferiority
>of 24fps - recognition that it was originally chosen because it was the
>minimum flicker rate only slightly above being an annoyance while minimizing
>the high costs of running through film too quickly. Another point is that
>the so-called "film look" is not a clearly definable look, nor is it
>consistent, given the different types of film material used of which all are
>unfaithful to color.
>
>Lee
>
>From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
>On Behalf Of Roger
>Sent: Sunday, October 28, 2012 12:48 PM
>To: [email protected]
>Subject: Re: [AP] Multiple Frame Rates and Resolutions Issue
>
>I'm coming rather too late to this but I'd work backwards from the delivery
>medium. Maybe inform the client that 24fps does not magically give a 'film
>look'. There are historic reasons why sound film runs at 24fps, established
>before the era of television (also investigate the refresh rate of a film
>projector, which masks the 24fps). There are also engineering reason whey
>PAL and NTSC do not run at 24fps! Fun all round for editors.
>
>On 8 Oct 2012, at 21:48, anschel91 wrote:
>
>> The client really wants the new footage moving forward as 24fps (more film
>look), though.
>
>With best wishes,
>Roger Shufflebottom
>+44 7973 543 660
>
>[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
> 
>
>

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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