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Tag: Preview app

How to Quickly Save a Video Frame Using QuickTime

Have you ever watched one of your videos on your Mac using QuickTime Player and wished you could easily pluck out a perfect frame to create a photo? Well, you can’t exactly do that. There’s no “Export Frame” or “Save as Photo” option in QuickTime.

Use Another App Instead

Sure, you can move your video file instead into iMovie, Final Cut Pro or the Photos app. And from there, you can scrub to the perfect frame and then save it.

But that takes a whole separate set of steps and file management. It’s not exactly fast.

What About Taking a Screenshot?

And yes, you can take a simple screenshot of your video window to freeze the action. But that can get you a lower resolution image. 

Frustrating, right?

Copy the Frame to QuckTime’s Clipboard and Open in Preview

Fortunately, there’s a simple workaround using QuickTime and the Preview app. Here’s how:

1. Open Your Video in QuickTime Player

First, double-click your video file. It should open in QuickTime by default. If not, choose “Open With,” and select QuickTime Player.

2. Find the Frame You Want

Quickly scrub through to the general location of your desired photo moment and then use the left and right arrow keys on your keyboard to move the video action frame-by-frame. This will get you to the exact frame you want. 

3. Copy the Frame to Clipboard

With your video paused at your desired frame, go to the top menu in QuickTime and click “Edit.” 

Then select “Copy” in the dropdown.
(Or you can use the keyboard shortcut for “Copy” – Command (⌘) + C.)

It will seem like nothing is happening. But don’t worry. You’ve copied the frame to your clipboard.

4. Open Preview and Create a New Image from the Clipboard

Next, open your Preview app. Then go to the menu and click on “File.” 

Then click “New from Clipboard.” 
(Or use the shortcut Command (⌘) + N.) 

Preview will create a new untitled image, containing exactly the frame you copied from QuickTime.

5. Save Your New Photo

Go to “File” and select “Export.” (I recommend you save it as a JPEG.)

That’s it. You’ve successfully created a photo file from your video freeze frame! 

Three Tips for Best Image Results

  • Choose High-Resolution Videos
    The quality of your exported photo depends on the resolution of your original video. 4K videos will yield much sharper images than lower-res files.
  • Avoid Full-Screen Mode
    When copying frames, it’s best to keep QuickTime in its default windowed mode to ensure you’re capturing the original pixel size of the video… not a scaled version.
  • Use Arrow Keys for Precision
    Sometimes the perfect photo is just one video frame away from where you are. Don’t rush it. You may need to go back and forth a few times with your left and right arrow keys to determine the best frame with the clearest image.  

When Would You Need to Export a Frame?

Exporting a frame from one of your family videos can really save the day. For example, if you’re documenting a birthday party, you’ll inevitably come to the happy birthday song and candles moment.

But when you’re recording that, there’s no time to simultaneously snap a photo.*

But you don’t need to stress. Just remember that you can later pull a few frames from your video to generate the sharable photos you need!

*Disclaimer: If you’re talented at multitasking on your iPhone, you can actually snap a few photos while simultaneously recording your video. Simply tap that little white circle on the screen to save each video frame. 

But this takes some coordination. I think it’s much easier to simply pull your perfect frame later in post.

Use the QuickTime/Preview Solution

All your videos contain a wealth of individual stills that you can choose to convert into photos.

And the next time you need to save that perfect frame from a favorite family video, the QuickTime/Preview handoff is a simple and quick path to the finish line.

How to Quickly Delete Multiple Photos from Your iPhone

If your iPhone is running out of space, one way to find more room is to delete photos. But that can take a lot of time if you haven’t been regularly doing it. Here are tips to help you speed through this digital chore.

You really don’t need all of those photos in your iPhone’s ‘Camera Roll.’  Especially if you always download them to your computer or up to the cloud where they ‘officially’ live and are safely backed up. But manually deleting one photo at a time using the Photos app on your iPhone is a losing battle when you’ve built up thousands of photos.

And eventually, you start to run out of space on your iPhone, and then it becomes a real problem.
(Sound familiar?)

There needs to be a faster way to thin out your photos in bulk.
Well, of course there is…

Time for some digital spring cleaning!

Bulk Delete Pics on your iPhone
First, go to ‘Camera Roll’ in Photos…

  • You’ll see the ‘Select’ icon in the top right corner that allows you to tap and highlight multiple photos at the same time. Tap that.
  • Then, tap the trash icon on the bottom right.
  • Finally, touch the delete tab that pops up and you’re done!

But for me, that simple process still feels somewhat limited when you’re trying to move through so many photos. Plus, I’d prefer a larger canvas to work with than the surface of an iPhone.

Ideally, I’d like to be able to manage this process on my iMac so I can see more photos all at once.

Well, guess what?
You can do exactly that using the ‘Preview’ app on your Mac.

Bulk Delete those iPhone Photos Using Your Mac
First, you connect your iPhone to you iMac or MacBook….

  • Then, open up Preview.
  • Select ‘Import from’ your iPhone’s name.
  • Then click on the photos to delete.
  • And finally, click on the little red delete circle icon on the bottom left.

BAM!

So the truth is both methods are extremely similar. Again, the big difference is you’re working on a larger screen, which makes me much happier.

And if Preview isn’t right for you, the ‘Image Capture’ app on your Mac pretty much duplicates the same process as Preview.

Simple Isn’t Always Easy
To be perfectly transparent, this topic squarely falls right under the
“How Did I Not Know That?” category.

Apple designers have done perfectly fine in setting this up for us.

But sometimes the obvious solution that’s staring right in your face requires a little more thinking on your part.
(Chalk it up to your brain power focusing on more universally pressing issues.)

I must admit… not so long ago, it wasn’t so ‘obvious’ to me either.
Or I’ve never taken the time to want to delete multiple photos from my iPhone.
(I’m not sure which one I should admit to!)

And the fact that you’re still reading this suggests that you also might need a little ‘refresher’ too.

I won’t tell anyone… as long as you don’t!

#ThingsYouShouldKnow