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I got a Nikon Z7 camera and I've taken some video at 120fps, and some other with their slow motion setting which is supposed to be 5 times slower than normal. But when I include in videos with 30fps settings, these clips play at normal, not-slowed speed.
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Premiere automatically plays video clips at normal speed compensated to match the Sequence Setting frame rate. For instance, I drop 60p clips in a 30p sequence and they play normal, not slow, that is default behavior.
You can either change the Speed/Duration on clip in timeline, or from Project Bin use Modify > Interpret to tell it what frame rate to assume, like 30fps.
For the 120fps clips in 30fps timeline, you would set speed to 25% to use all frames from original clip.
Thanks
Jeff
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Premiere automatically plays video clips at normal speed compensated to match the Sequence Setting frame rate. For instance, I drop 60p clips in a 30p sequence and they play normal, not slow, that is default behavior.
You can either change the Speed/Duration on clip in timeline, or from Project Bin use Modify > Interpret to tell it what frame rate to assume, like 30fps.
For the 120fps clips in 30fps timeline, you would set speed to 25% to use all frames from original clip.
Thanks
Jeff
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I have used the speed/duration on normal speed clips before, but didn't think I would have to on integrally slowed ones. Using the other, modify method, does that change all in a sequence or just the desired clips? I have mixed 30fps and 120fps in videos, and I'm not sure which is which. Is there info somewhere that shows their recording speed? thanks.
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I found the modify and uncovered the frame rates, thanks.
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"but didn't think I would have to on integrally slowed ones"
Depends on the camera being used. A few years back, the high-frame rate recording was more of a short-burst gimmick offering. Engage that special "slow-record mode" and it would record at 120fps for just several seconds perhaps, buffering the action and then writing out the file as if it was 30fps. Meaning you record 4 seconds, and it saves to the card as 12-seconds of 30p rather than 4-seconds of 120p. Thus playback was automatically slow-motion, in the camera or the edit software. Just enough for a golf swing for instance.
Newer cameras have more horsepower and memory cards are faster, so *some* cameras now offer continuous 120fps recording, and the clip is saved as a 120fps clip as well thus not having automatic slow-motion properties upon playback. If you interpret in Premiere as 30p, 1-second of 120fps footage then becomes 4-seconds of 30p footage and you get your slow-mo.
To see what a clip is natively, just right-click the clip in Project Bin and check Properties.
If you don't change fps of clip via Modify, you can then change speed in timeline and Premiere is intelligent enough to look at original frame rate and use those extra frames to get you the native smooth slow motion.
I routinely shoot 60p and edit as 30p and when I need slow-mo or just want to lengthen a clip a bit, I know I can safely apply 50% slow and get silky-smooth results. Any less than 50% and of course it needs to start duplicating some frames.
Thanks
Jeff
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I since realized that I just need to use a different camera setting, 5x or 4x slower to have it play that much slower in PP.
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This isn't working for me. I shot in 59.94 and I placed on a 29.97 timeline. I select speed/duration and move to 50% but it stutters. If I frame by frame it, I see that it only moves every other frame, it's not using all 60fps slowed on a 30 fps timeline.
Same things happens when i right click in the bin and select interpret footage.
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Did you solve this? I have the same issue?
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I realized this occured when my shutter speed dropped to 1/30th of a second on my camera. (so it was, in effect, 30 frame not 60)

