Video Editor
Trim, color-grade, add LUTs & export — no upload.
Runs entirely in your browser — nothing you enter is uploaded, logged, or tracked.
A real video editor that runs entirely on your device — upload one or more clips, trim and split them, drag them into the order you want, then reframe to any aspect ratio (16:9, vertical 9:16, square, 4:5…). Change each clip’s speed (slow-mo or fast-forward) and smooth out handheld shake with optical stabilization. Color-grade on a GPU pipeline: one-tap filters, an auto-grade that white-balances and levels for you, fine-tune sliders (exposure, contrast, saturation, vibrance, temperature, tint, highlights, shadows), and your own .cube LUTs. Copy settings between clips or apply them to all at once, and export with a quality/size slider. Because every export is rebuilt from raw pixels, the source’s GPS location, device model and EXIF/maker tags are physically left behind — and you can verify it on the output. Nothing is ever uploaded.
Slow-mo or fast-forward this clip — the audio speeds up or slows down with it.
Smooths handheld shake by analyzing motion and cropping in a little. There’s no gyroscope data in a browser, so this is optical stabilization (best for position shake on shorter clips) — it plays through the clip to analyze, taking about half its length. If it ever makes things worse, just remove it.
Copy this clip’s color, speed & mute to another clip — or to all of them at once.
One-tap looks for the selected clip. They set the Adjust sliders, so you can fine-tune after.
Your export is rebuilt from raw pixels into a brand-new file, so location, device model, EXIF/maker tags and the original date can’t carry over. There’s nothing to toggle — it’s guaranteed by how this works.
Clip settings
Frequently asked questions
Is my video uploaded anywhere?
No. Decoding, editing, color grading, preview and the final encode all run locally in your browser — there are no servers, no network calls, no analytics and no third-party scripts. You can disconnect from the internet after the page loads and it still works.
Can I upload and apply my own LUTs?
Yes. Drop in any Adobe/DaVinci .cube 3D LUT and it’s applied on the GPU in real time, with an adjustable strength slider, per clip. Your LUT files are read on your device and never uploaded. There are also one-tap filter looks and a full set of color sliders if you don’t have LUTs.
What does “auto-grade” do?
It analyzes the selected clip — gray-world white balance plus a luma histogram — and sets the exposure, contrast, temperature and tint sliders to neutralize color casts and use the full tonal range. It writes those values into the normal sliders, so it’s a starting point you can fine-tune to taste, not a black box.
Can it stabilize shaky footage like Gyroflow?
It has optical stabilization — close to Gyroflow’s idea, within a browser’s limits. There’s no gyroscope data available to a web page, so instead it analyzes the actual motion between frames, computes a smoothed camera path, and crops in slightly to follow it. It’s best for handheld position shake; it isn’t lens-distortion or rolling-shutter correction (which is what gyro data uniquely enables). Analysis plays through the clip, taking about a quarter of its length.
Can I change a clip’s speed, or copy settings between clips?
Yes. Each clip has a speed control (0.25× slow-mo up to 4× fast-forward; the audio follows). And you can copy one clip’s color, speed and mute and paste them onto another clip — or apply them to every clip at once. Each clip also has an info button that shows exactly what’s applied to it.
Does it remove metadata and GPS from the video?
Yes, and it can’t not. The export is re-encoded from raw pixels into a brand-new file, so location, device model, EXIF/maker tags and the original date/time are left behind — there is nothing to toggle. After export you can tap “Verify no metadata” and the tool reads your exported file’s structure back to confirm it’s clean.
Can I make a vertical video for TikTok, Reels or Shorts?
Yes. Pick the 9:16 aspect ratio (or 1:1, 4:5, 4:3, 16:9, 21:9), choose Fit to add bars or Fill to crop, and set the bar color. The preview shows exactly what you’ll get — it uses the same GPU renderer as the export.
What format and quality will I get?
Chrome, Edge and Safari (including iPhone) export MP4 (H.264/AAC); Firefox exports WebM (VP9/VP8 + Opus) because it can’t encode MP4 in-browser. The tool detects this and tells you before you export, and names the download to match. A quality/size slider sets the target bitrate with a live file-size estimate. Encoding runs in real time, so keep the tab in front while it works.