Step 1: Provide your MP4 files using the button above or by toss and let go.
Step 2: Click the 'Convert' button to start the conversion.
Step 3: Fetch your converted JPG files.
MP4 to JPG Conversion FAQ
How do I extract individual frames from MP4 as JPG images?
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Upload the MP4 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 MP4 video stream, encoded as a separate JPG file, and bundled as a ZIP for download.
At what resolution do the extracted JPG images come out?
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Same resolution as the source MP4: a 1080p MP4 produces 1920x1080 JPG frames, a 4K MP4 produces 3840x2160 JPG 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 MP4 as JPG?
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Yes, but mind the file count — a 30 fps 1-minute MP4 produces 1,800 JPG 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 MP4 at every-frame would produce ~100,000 JPG images.
Will the JPG frames preserve the MP4 colour grading?
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Yes — colour is decoded with the same matrix the source MP4 stream advertises (BT.709 for HD, BT.2020 for 4K HDR). HDR sources are tone-mapped to SDR when extracting to a JPG that cannot store HDR pixel ranges natively (JPG, PNG-8). Target high-bit PNG-16 or TIFF if you need to keep extended dynamic range.
How big is one extracted JPG frame on disk?
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Depends on resolution and JPG 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 MP4 is roughly 50 GB and gets split across multiple ZIPs.
Does the extracted JPG keep camera EXIF metadata?
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A MP4 container does not carry per-frame EXIF the way a still camera does, so the JPG 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.
How long does frame extraction from MP4 to JPG take?
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Frame decoding is fast — typically 20-30% of source duration. A 5-minute MP4 -> JPG bundle finishes in about 1 minute regardless of how many frames you pick, because the bottleneck is the JPG encoder writing many small files in parallel, not the MP4 demuxer.
Can I extract frames at exact timestamps inside the MP4 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 JPG file per timestamp. Useful for chapter thumbnails, scene reference shots, or building a contact sheet for review.
Is my MP4 private during frame extraction?
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Yes — same privacy model as every conversion. Source MP4 and the extracted JPG bundle are processed in isolated workers and deleted within minutes of completion.
Why are my extracted JPG frames blurry?
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Almost always motion blur baked into the source MP4 (the camera or subject was moving while that frame was captured). Try picking timestamps from static scenes, or extract several adjacent frames and pick the sharpest. The pipeline does not synthesize detail that is not in the original MP4.
Can the converter pick one frame per scene change in the MP4?
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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 JPG export later this quarter.
Can I use the extracted JPG frames commercially?
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Yes, subject to whatever licence governs the source MP4 content. The conversion is a format change — copyright on the content stays with whoever holds it on the MP4. We add no watermark, no embedded stamp, and claim no licence over the JPG bundle.