Hi. Dr.,
I noticed that you are knowledgable about some digital camcorders..I am planning to buy one and have limited down to 2:
Canon Optura Pi or the Sony DC-PCR100
What I want may not be possible, but I would like a camera with the closest look to 35 mm movie film. I have looked at both cameras physically but have not seen actual footage.
The Canon has 3 shooting modes; In Frame Movie mode users can record high-speed action at 30 frame images per second for the purpose of extracting high-resolution frames from video. Images can then be displayed, printed or enhanced with a computer. Normal Movie mode delivers more than 500 lines of resolution for superior image quality and color rendition for playback on a television monitor. And, Digital Photo mode with self-timer, captures more than 700 remarkably clear still frame images on a single 80-minute cassette in SP mode.
Does this 3 mode ability (esp. frame movie) combined with the Canon's albeit lower pixel (380,000 and RGB filter combo) beat the Sony's higher pixel 1,040,000 pixel for closest thing to best movie quality. Best subjectively speaking being close to a real film stock film. I thought higher pixel was always better, but I heard the Canon's use of RGB filter really shines. (sony has HAD technology which is supposed to make it reduce noise in low light...I do not know if that makes colors richer in regular light though).
Am I making sense.
Which would you pick? thoughts....and thanks
I noticed that you are knowledgable about some digital camcorders..I am planning to buy one and have limited down to 2:
Canon Optura Pi or the Sony DC-PCR100
What I want may not be possible, but I would like a camera with the closest look to 35 mm movie film. I have looked at both cameras physically but have not seen actual footage.
The Canon has 3 shooting modes; In Frame Movie mode users can record high-speed action at 30 frame images per second for the purpose of extracting high-resolution frames from video. Images can then be displayed, printed or enhanced with a computer. Normal Movie mode delivers more than 500 lines of resolution for superior image quality and color rendition for playback on a television monitor. And, Digital Photo mode with self-timer, captures more than 700 remarkably clear still frame images on a single 80-minute cassette in SP mode.
Does this 3 mode ability (esp. frame movie) combined with the Canon's albeit lower pixel (380,000 and RGB filter combo) beat the Sony's higher pixel 1,040,000 pixel for closest thing to best movie quality. Best subjectively speaking being close to a real film stock film. I thought higher pixel was always better, but I heard the Canon's use of RGB filter really shines. (sony has HAD technology which is supposed to make it reduce noise in low light...I do not know if that makes colors richer in regular light though).
Am I making sense.
Which would you pick? thoughts....and thanks
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