Trinn 1: Last opp din MOV filer ved hjelp av knappen ovenfor eller ved å dra og slippe.
Trinn 2: Klikk på «Konverter»-knappen for å starte konverteringen.
Trinn 3: Last ned den konverterte filen JPEG filer
MOV til JPEG Vanlige spørsmål om konvertering
How do I extract frames from a MOV video as JPEG images?
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Upload the MOV and the converter exposes a frame-extraction picker: every Nth frame, frames at specific timestamps, or one frame per second. Each chosen frame is encoded as an individual JPEG file and the full set is bundled into a ZIP archive for download.
At what resolution does each extracted JPEG frame come out?
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The same resolution as the MOV video — a 1080p MOV produces 1920×1080 JPEG frames; a 4K MOV produces 3840×2160 JPEG frames. Use the resize utility after extraction if you want smaller thumbnails or social-media-sized crops.
Can I extract every single frame from MOV as JPEG?
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Yes, but be careful with file count — a 30fps 1-minute MOV produces 1,800 JPEG frames. We pack them into a ZIP automatically. For longer clips, the "1 per second" option (60 frames) or specific timestamps gives a manageable result.
Will the extracted JPEG images preserve the MOV color grading?
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Yes — colour is decoded with the matrix the source MOV uses (BT.709 for HD, BT.2020 for 4K HDR). HDR sources are tone-mapped to SDR on extraction to JPEG because most JPEG formats (PNG, JPG) cannot store HDR pixel ranges natively.
What is the file size of one extracted JPEG frame?
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Depends on resolution and JPEG codec. A 1080p PNG frame is typically 2 to 5 MB; a 1080p JPG at quality-85 is 200 to 500 KB; a 4K PNG is 6 to 15 MB. At the extreme, every-frame PNG extraction of a 10-minute 1080p MOV produces ~50 GB total.
Does the extracted JPEG retain EXIF camera metadata?
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The MOV container does not store per-frame EXIF the way a still camera does, so the JPEG files come out with empty EXIF. We embed a `creation_time` field pointing at the source frame timestamp so you can re-sort the bundle by capture order.
How long does frame extraction from MOV to JPEG take?
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Frame extraction is fast — typically 20 to 30% of source duration on the standard pipeline. A 5-minute MOV → JPEG bundle finishes in about a minute regardless of frame count, because the bottleneck is the JPEG encoder, not the MOV demuxer.
Can I extract frames at specific timestamps in the MOV?
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Yes — the advanced option accepts a comma-separated list of timestamps (e.g. `00:01:23,00:05:00,00:10:42`) and produces one JPEG file per timestamp. Useful for chapter thumbnails, scene reference shots, or thumbnailing long lectures.
Is my MOV video private during frame extraction?
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Yes — same privacy model as every conversion. Source video and extracted JPEG frames are processed in isolated workers and deleted within minutes; no human review, no training corpus, no third-party access.
Why are my extracted JPEG frames blurry?
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Almost always motion blur baked into the MOV source — the camera or subject was moving when the frame was captured. Pick timestamps from static scenes, or extract adjacent frames and choose the sharpest. The pipeline does not synthesize detail that was not there.
Can I extract one JPEG per scene change rather than per timestamp?
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Not in the basic flow — use the "1 per second" option as an approximation, then visually pick scene-change frames. A dedicated scene-detection extractor is on the roadmap; ping us if it would unblock a specific workflow.
Can I use the extracted JPEG frames commercially?
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Yes, subject to whatever licence governs the source MOV content. The format change adds no claim — we add no watermark and assert no licence over the JPEG output. Copyright tracks the source, not the converter.