- Source: Full frame (cinematography)
In cinematography, full frame refers to an image area (today most commonly on a digital sensor) that is the same size as that used by a 35mm still camera. Still cameras run the film horizontally behind the lens, whereas standard 35mm motion-picture cameras run the film vertically. Thus a 35mm still camera's image is significantly larger than that of a standard 35mm motion-picture camera.
Specialty motion-picture formats have used film running horizontally, notably VistaVision (which produced a "full-frame" image) and Imax.
Historically, most digital cinema cameras have used Super-35-sized (similar to APS-C) sensors, largely to maintain compatibility with existing lenses and to produce traditional "cinematic" depth of field and field of view.
Full-frame cameras require lenses with larger optics, and produce shallower depth of field than conventional 35mm cinema cameras.
Technical specifications
See also
Image sensor format
35mm format
Full-frame digital SLR
Full-frame mirrorless interchangeable-lens camera
Half-frame camera
List of film formats
Silent film
Reframing (filmmaking)
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Sinematografi
- Godzilla Minus One
- Full frame (cinematography)
- Full frame
- Digital cinematography
- Sony FX3
- Anamorphic format
- Headroom (photographic framing)
- Wide shot
- 2K resolution
- Digital movie camera
- Wide-angle lens