![]() If not, feel free to play with it as long as you like. Tap and hold one of the dark vertical grabbers on the blue timeline to begin. By adjusting the area that is less dashed, we can adjust the range of the video slowdown. In addition to this control, you should notice a blue dashed timeline with more sparsely populated lines somewhere in the center. There will be a thumbnail row at the top, which allows you to trim the start and end position of the clip, just as with regular video clips. Open up your “Photos” app and tap the video in question. This is where the slow motion editing process comes in. Some of them however, need to be adjusted. But what it the actual part you wanted to see in “Slo Mo” isn’t played back correctly? For most videos, the fit is great, right out of the box. Your videos begin playing at regular speed, slow down considerably to show the action in detail, then finally fade to regular speed before they end. ![]() ![]() Editing “Slo Mo” clips on iPhone “Photos” app > Tap videoĪpple made slow motion videos on the iPhone even more impressive by adding a so-called “ramping” effect. Focus by tapping the subject before hitting “Record”. Hints: Try to pick a subject that is easy to keep in frame and moves rather quickly. Tap the “Record” button just as you usually would. Depending upon your iPhone model you’ll now notice 120 fps or 240 fps in the bottom right corner of the screen. Swipe your finger across the different modes to get to “Slo Mo”. At the bottom of the screen you’ll find a sliding menu that allows you to pick the operational mode. Recording a clip in Slo Mo mode requires, of course, that you open the “Camera” app that is already preinstalled on your iPhone. No extra equipment needed! Recording slow motion videos on your iPhone “Camera” app > Slo Mo Thus we call it slow motion recording and this is a tutorial on how to create slow motion videos on your iPhone. If you do the math for converting this to the regular 30 fps, you’ll notice that time has been stretched. The cameras of recent iPhones can record around 120 fps (frames per second) or even 240 fps, which are then played back at a slower frame rate. This edit isn’t permanent and can be altered as many times as desired.The so-called “slo-mo” feature on the iPhone 5s, iPhone 6, iPhone 6s and up captures extremely fast action and makes all of the detail visible on your video. The slowed down segment is the series of vertical lines that are spaced out, between two taller white lines. Drag on the taller lines to increase or decrease the length of the effect then play back the video to take a look the main white scrubber on the thumbnail timeline below will move with your action. This reveals a timeline of multiple vertical white lines. To alter which segment you wish to slow down tap ‘Edit’ (along the top of the screen if held horizontally or along the bottom if held vertically). The video itself will have a default slo-mo segment that’s already been applied to the video. This reveals the video clip you just shot with the usual timeline of image thumbnails across the bottom of the screen. ![]() Record video like normal and when finished tap on the thumbnail in the bottom left. To do so open the Camera app then swipe across the display from left to right if holding the phone vertically, or bottom to top if holding horizontally, until the slo-mo option is selected. If you’ve an iPhone 5s or later, then you can shoot slo-mo video.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |