Frame Rate Problems?

Hey, I am making a YouTube documentary, and I asked YouTubers to answer questions in videos and send them back to me, I got videos back, and I am happy with their responses, but there is just one problem: the frame rate. I did ask for 25fps, for editing purposes, so either they had no clue on how to fix this or they forgot. I am not going to get mad at them, I just want to know, if there is ANY way I can edit these together with them at different frame rates. The editor I use only lets you if its the same frame rate so I assume it's the same for all video editing programs. If you have any advice for me I would appreciate it so much!

Thanks

Claire
LIYI :D
 
Did not quite understand the problem, i assume you have 2 files that were recorded or already rendered at different framerates and you can not edit them in editor of your choice. Sony Vegas has no problems editing such files together or setting to different framerate for render.
 
there is no way you can change the frame rate of the original video. its possible to make it 2x faster but the sound will also go fast and we all know how that sounds.
 
Get Sony Vegas (or any other editing program that can do this) and just plop all the files into the editor, edit and then render the video at 25FPS if that is what you wish.
 
Run the individual files (whichever ones are recorded in the wrong framerate) through a program like MPEG Streamclip, changing their fps to 25, then import into your project and they'll be fine :) What do you edit in?
 
Handbrake: Play around with it, just make sure you don't overwrite the original videos (save with a new name). Also make sure you set a constant frame rate and an average bit rate of whatever the current video's bit rate is. This program has saved so many of my videos and many other YouTuber's videos as well.

Here's a guide that might help a bit more:

Handbrake is the program I use as well. It's great for changing frame rates. I normally record at 60FPS (59.97fps) but if I have to include a screen capture which I usually record at 15fps then I run it through Handbrake to bring it back up to 60 fps.

If you do use handbrake, make sure you set the anamorphic setting to none. Otherwise, it will do some unwanted resizing. I will also set the Quality setting in the video tab to "0 RF" which outputs a lossless file. This will make for a big file, but I don't want the conversion to degrade the video any further than it has to.
 
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