Upload the FLV file and the converter exposes a frame-extraction picker: every Nth frame, frames at specific timestamps, or one frame per second. Each chosen frame is decoded from the FLV video stream, encoded as a separate TIFF file, and bundled as a ZIP for download.
At what resolution do the extracted TIFF images come out?
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Same resolution as the source FLV: a 1080p FLV produces 1920x1080 TIFF frames, a 4K FLV produces 3840x2160 TIFF frames. The converter does not upscale or downsample — pixel dimensions are pulled straight from the decoded frame. Use /resize-image/ after extraction if you need smaller thumbnails.
Can I extract every frame of a FLV as TIFF?
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Yes, but mind the file count — a 30 fps 1-minute FLV produces 1,800 TIFF frames. We pack them into a single ZIP archive automatically. For longer clips, prefer the "1 per second" preset (60 frames per minute) or pick specific timestamps. An hour of FLV at every-frame would produce ~100,000 TIFF images.
Yà — àwọ̀ náà tí a kọ́dè láti inú mátírísì tí òjútó ààyè-iṣẹ́ tí a fi pamọ́ fún ààyè-iṣẹ́ tí a fi pamọ́ fún ìwọ̀n FLV (BT.709 fún HD, BT.2020 fún 4K HDR). Àwọn ojú opò HDR ní àwọn ààyè-iṣẹ́ tí a fi pamọ́ fún SDR nígbà tí a bá fi pamọ́ sí TIFF tí kò lè fi àwọn píxel HDR pamọ́ nípa ìṣàfarawé (JPG, PNG-8). Ló PNG-16 àti TIFF bí o bá fẹ́ fi ààyè-iṣẹ́ dínàmìka pamọ́.
How big is one extracted TIFF frame on disk?
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Depends on resolution and TIFF codec choice: a 1080p PNG frame is 2-5 MB lossless, a 1080p JPG at quality 85 is 200-500 KB. Multiply by frame count to size the ZIP — at the extreme, every-frame PNG extraction of a 10-minute 1080p FLV is roughly 50 GB and gets split across multiple ZIPs.
Àwọn ààtò àìṣàfilọ́lẹ̀ tí a yádédé tí a yádédé TIFF tí a yádédé
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A FLV container does not carry per-frame EXIF the way a still camera does, so the TIFF files come out with empty EXIF blocks. The converter does embed a `creation_time` field pointing at the source frame timestamp, so you can re-sort the bundle in chronological order or correlate with subtitle / chapter markers.
Frame decoding is fast — typically 20-30% of source duration. A 5-minute FLV -> TIFF bundle finishes in about 1 minute regardless of how many frames you pick, because the bottleneck is the TIFF encoder writing many small files in parallel, not the FLV demuxer.
Can I extract frames at exact timestamps inside the FLV video?
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Yes — the advanced timestamp option accepts a comma-separated list (e.g. `00:01:23, 00:05:00, 00:10:42.5`) and produces one TIFF file per timestamp. Useful for chapter thumbnails, scene reference shots, or building a contact sheet for review.
Is my FLV private during frame extraction?
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Ya — àwọn àwọn ààyè-iṣẹ́ ìdáràn ní pàtó bí àwọn ìṣàfarawé. Àwọn oríṣí FLV àti bùnẹ́ẹ̀tì TIFF tí a tí a pàtó nínú àwọn olùkọ́ àtí a pàtó nínú àwọn ààyè-iṣẹ́ àìdáràn.
Can the converter pick one frame per scene change in the FLV?
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Not in the basic flow — use the "1 per second" preset as a rough approximation and visually skim the bundle for scene changes. A dedicated scene-detect extractor (powered by ffmpeg select=gt(scene)) is on the roadmap and will land for TIFF export later this quarter.
Can I use the extracted TIFF frames commercially?
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Yà, nípa ìṣẹ̀dà tí àwọn àwọn ìṣàmúlò-ètò oríṣíẹ̀lì tí a fi pamọ́ fún FLV. Ìyàn ní ìyipada àwọn ìṣàmúlò-ètò - àwọn ìṣàmúlò-ètò àwọn ìṣàmúlò-ètò náà tí wọ́n tí wọ́n ní pàtó nípa FLV. A kò fàyè gba àwọn àmì-ìwé, àwọn àmì-ìwé tí a fi pamọ́, àti àwọn ìṣàmúlò-ètò tí a fi pamọ́ pàtó nípá bùnẹ́ẹ̀lì TIFF.
FLV (Fidio Flash) jẹ ọna kika eiyan fidio ti o dagbasoke nipasẹ Adobe. O ti wa ni commonly lo fun online fidio sisanwọle ati ki o ni atilẹyin nipasẹ Adobe Flash Player.