Turn any local clip into clean still images without uploads. Scrub to an exact moment, collect frames fast, and export them in one organized download.
Drag & drop or click to choose a video file (Max 500 MB)
Supports MP4, MOV, and WebM video files
Open a local video, choose how you want to capture moments, then export clean frame images without leaving the browser.
Drop in a local video file and let the page prepare a private preview workspace with timeline controls, file details, and output settings.
Scrub for one exact frame or set a timed interval when you need a broader sweep across the clip for research, design, or review work.
Check the captured frames, remove anything unnecessary, then download single images or one ZIP package for the whole selected set.
Use a browser-based workflow that stays responsive on long clips, keeps files local, and makes bulk exports easier to manage.
Move through the video with a visual timeline strip, stop on the exact moment you need, and save only the frames that matter for edits, reviews, or storyboards.
Video decoding and frame generation stay on your device, so confidential footage, client drafts, and unreleased material never need to leave your browser session.
Switch between careful one-by-one capture and automatic interval capture, depending on whether you need a hero frame, a contact sheet, or a quick scan of the whole clip.
Save frames as JPG, PNG, or WebP, and adjust quality when smaller files matter, giving you cleaner control over how images behave in later workflows.
When you capture many frames, export them together in a single ZIP so naming stays tidy, downloads stay manageable, and handoff to teammates is much simpler.
Frame estimates, batch handling, and warning prompts help prevent overload on long videos, so large jobs stay more predictable before you commit to extraction.
Open a clip, capture the moments you need, and export polished stills in one pass with a private workflow that stays on your device.
Start Extracting FramesCommon questions about capture quality, supported files, browser limits, and exporting frame images from local videos.
Upload a local video, wait for the preview to load, then either scrub to a precise moment for manual capture or switch to interval capture for repeated grabs. Saved frames appear below the player so you can review, delete, and export them right away.
No. The extraction flow runs in your browser, so the video stays on your device while frames are created locally. That makes the tool practical for private drafts, internal review clips, and any footage you do not want to send to a remote service.
MP4, MOV, and WebM are the intended formats. Real support still depends on whether your browser can decode the file and codec combination. If the browser cannot preview the clip, frame capture will usually fail too, so converting the source file often solves the issue.
Manual capture is best when you want a few exact moments, such as a thumbnail or product shot. Interval capture is better when you need broader coverage from a scene, because it samples frames across the clip automatically using the timing you choose.
Yes. You can choose JPG, PNG, or WebP output, and quality control is available for the compressed formats. That gives you room to optimize for visual clarity, smaller downloads, or a more compact ZIP when you are saving a larger frame set.
Very dense captures can push browser memory and CPU usage higher, especially on longer clips or smaller devices. The warning appears before extraction starts so you can increase the interval, reduce the expected frame count, and avoid an unnecessarily heavy run.
Yes. You can review the captured results, remove unwanted frames, and then export what remains. This is useful when you start with a broad interval pass, narrow the set visually, and keep only the images that are truly useful for your project.
Yes. There is no signup wall for the browser workflow on this page. You can open a file, capture frames, clear the workspace, and run another pass whenever needed, as long as your browser can comfortably handle the source video and chosen output volume.
Jump to the most commonly used image sizes for your projects