Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - What's the difference between a video camera and a video camera?

What's the difference between a video camera and a video camera?

Simply put. The camera takes pictures and records moving images.

Cameras, that is, video cameras, record static effects.

The biggest difference between a video camera and a video camera is the shutter and the recording medium.

Cameras use continuous shutters to record information on dynamic film (this is a traditional camera). After precise mechanical action, every time the shutter closes, an image (the technical term is "frame") is recorded on a specific length of the film. After repeated shutter switches, multiple frames of images were recorded on the strip film. These images are related. I don't remember it clearly because of the image retention principle of human eyes. ) into a moving image. (Digitization of digital cameras is the old principle now, and the basic principle is the same. )

Camera. Camera is a common name in Jianghu. It records a single frame image on a storage medium through a single shutter. From the technical structure, it seems to be simpler than the camera, but it requires higher imaging effect (such as image clarity, dispersion, depth of field, etc.). Of course, cameras also have these requirements, but it seems that they are not as demanding as photographers, so the technical content of cameras now is also quite high. . . .