Currently I am using this command to extract the images:
ffmpeg -i input.mp4 output_%03d.jpeg
But how can I improve the JPEG image quality?
-qscale:v
to control qualityUse -qscale:v
(or the alias -q:v
) as an output option.
-qmin 1
output option (because the default is -qmin 2
).ffmpeg -i input.mp4 -qscale:v 2 output_%03d.jpg
See the image muxer documentation for more options involving image outputs.
ffmpeg -ss 60 -i input.mp4 -qscale:v 4 -frames:v 1 output.jpg
Use -update 1
image muxer option. Example for once per second from a live streaming input:
ffmpeg -i rtmp://input.foo -q:v 4 -r 1 -update 1 output.jpg
-qmin 1 -qmax 1
in addition to -q:v 1
doubled the file size. And I can seem to see a very slight improvement also.
Jun 27, 2015 at 0:43
-qmin 1 -qmax 1
resulted in larger file, but gives me an exact same image. I validated this via photoshop, 2 layers and difference filter. The pixels are the same.
Nov 30, 2015 at 15:41
Output the images in a lossless format such as PNG:
mkdir stills
ffmpeg -i my-film.mp4 -vsync 0 -f image2 stills/my-film-%06d.png
Then use another program (where you can more precisely specify quality, subsampling and DCT method – e.g. GIMP) to convert the PNGs you want to JPEG.
It is possible to obtain slightly sharper images in JPEG format this way than is possible with -qmin 1 -q:v 1
and outputting as JPEG directly from ffmpeg
.
If you want to extract only the key frames (which are likely to be of higher quality post-edit) you can use something like this:
ffmpeg -skip_frame nokey -i my-film.mp4 -vsync 0 -f image2 stills/my-film-%06d.png
The -vsync 0
parameter avoids needing to specify the frame rate with -r
and means all frames in the input file are treated as, um, a frame.
ffmpeg
] command, I get high quality png's that are of identical quality to the original video." What version of ffmpeg
are you using that is outputting PNG8
files, and what is your input format?
ffmpeg
.
ffmpeg
sets the JPEG compression quality to 90 (instead of 70) if you have -q2
set, but that is still lower than I would normally use. Also note it is recompressing a still from a movie that has already been compressed, and that 'key frames' will be of better quality. But whilst MPEG is based on JPEG, it seems not possible to lift even key frames directly as JPEG images.
-qscale:v
parameter when trying to split an .mp4 video into frames. The simple change from .jpg to .png produced the greatest improvement in quality.
mpv --osd-msg1='${estimated-frame-number} / ${estimated-frame-count}' vid1.mp4
sed -i 's/^/eq(n\\,/' frm.txt; sed -i 's/$/)\+/' frm.txt; sed -i '$ s/.$//' frm.txt; #adds eq(n\, #adds )+ at the end of each line #remove + in lastline (last digit)
then extract them as bmp or png
frms=$(cat frm.txt); ffmpeg -i vid_1.mp4 -vf "select='$frms'" -fps_mode drop "frames_%03d.bmp"
then convert to jpg - the difference is HUGE 350kb (ffmpeg jpg of best quality vs 2MB (bmp converting to jpg)!!!!
for pic in *.bmp; do convert -units PixelsPerInch -density 300 -quality 100 "$pic" "${pic//}_j.jpg"; done
(you need imagemagick's convert of course)