You can make a difference in the Apple Support Community!

When you sign up with your Apple Account, you can provide valuable feedback to other community members by upvoting helpful replies and User Tips.

Looks like no one’s replied in a while. To start the conversation again, simply ask a new question.

How do I set the frames per secondframe rate (FPS) for a project in iMovie 10.2.3?

How do I set the frame rate for an iMovie project? Especially the frame rate for the project itself as well as my export? It's infuriatingly difficult to find any settings in this project, it seems to be getting worse and worse with every iteration.


I drag and drop in 30 fps clips but when I "share to file" (why isn't this called export as common sense would dictate) I get 29.97 fps.


I want to work 100% in 30 fps and fix it to this. I never want to see 29.97 for any reason. I can't fix it.


Is there even a way?


All instructions online are either outdated or don't work.



iMovie versio: 10.2.3

macOS: 11.3.1 (20E241)

Posted on Jun 3, 2021 8:39 AM

Reply
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Jun 3, 2021 11:07 AM

iMovie sets the frame rate of a project as that of the first-ever video clip placed into a newly created project. You can delete or replace the video clip later without affecting the project. If you want to change the frame rate of an existing project you need to create a new project and set the frame rate there.


— Rich

Similar questions

3 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Jun 3, 2021 11:07 AM in response to brsm1990

iMovie sets the frame rate of a project as that of the first-ever video clip placed into a newly created project. You can delete or replace the video clip later without affecting the project. If you want to change the frame rate of an existing project you need to create a new project and set the frame rate there.


— Rich

Jun 4, 2021 12:18 AM in response to brsm1990

Frame rate is set to the rate of your first clips. So your clips are 29.97fps, not 30. (30 is often used as a shortcut for 29.97).


You don't want to be converting frame rate if you can avoid it. Frame rate conversion will always cause jerkyness in videos, and converting from 29.97 to 30 would result in adding roughly 1 frame every 1000, so you would get a jerk every 33 seconds or so. I would find that very annoying.

Jun 4, 2021 7:40 AM in response to TonyCollinet

Hi, TonyCollinet,


Although I have not done personal testing, here is my understanding of frame rates: Decreasing, not increasing, the frame rate substantially can result in jerkiness. So playing a 60 fps clip at 30 fps can give a stutter. But increasing the frame rate substantially results in slow motion, not jerkiness. Increasing the frame rate a minuscule amount like from 29.97 to 30 fps I would think would not be visible to the human eye, and in any event should be smooth. I am looking at it as not adding a frame but playing the frames you have faster. (Possibly a small increase in frame rate could make a difference if precision were required to sync one clip with another video clip or with an audio clip.) That seems logical to me because playing more frames in the same amount of time should be smoother, not jerky. Have you observed differently?


-- Rich



How do I set the frames per secondframe rate (FPS) for a project in iMovie 10.2.3?

Welcome to Apple Support Community
A forum where Apple customers help each other with their products. Get started with your Apple Account.