Video settings
Sample interval
Why Video
What Video does best
Timeline mode
Sample frames across the clip for a color-over-time strip. Spot mood shifts a single frame would never reveal.
Single-frame mode
Scrub to any frame for a precise one-off palette — same as feeding a still to Palette, but with the timeline at hand.
How it works
Three steps with Video
STEP 01
Drop a video or GIF
MP4, WebM, or animated GIF.
STEP 02
Scrub or timeline
Pick a frame or sweep the whole clip.
STEP 03
Save what you find
Save frames with palettes for later.
Use cases
When to reach for this one
01
Title-card mockups
Pull a palette from a single frame to match an opener.
02
Color-grading audits
Timeline mode reveals color drift across a 60-second clip.
03
Brand video QA
Confirm the corporate red holds across an entire clip.
About this tool
Scrub to any frame for a one-off palette, or sweep the whole clip for a color-over-time visualization.
FAQ
Questions about Video
MP4, WebM, GIF.
Frames are sampled at your chosen interval and quantized into a color-over-time strip.
No. Decoding happens client-side via the browser's video element. Nothing leaves your machine.
No hard cap, but timeline mode is best under 60 seconds. Longer clips work — sampling intervals get sparser to keep the strip readable.
Yes — single-frame mode saves the still image alongside its palette. The frame restores when you reopen the session from your library.
Continue with this palette in
Send these colors to another tool
Three siblings inside Image Color Studio, three destinations in the wider iColorPalette app. Cards show what your palette would look like there.
Studio siblings