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🎞️ Cinematic Animation · 100% In Your Browser

Photo to Video

Transform any photo into a professional cinematic video with smooth Ken Burns zoom and pan effects — the same technique used in documentaries and TV productions. Instant, free, no upload.

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Drag & drop your photo here or

JPG, PNG, WebP · Max 20 MB

🔒 All processing runs 100% in your browser using the HTML5 Canvas API. Your photos are never uploaded to any server.
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How to Create a Cinematic Video from a Photo

This tool applies the Ken Burns effect — a professional cinematic technique named after the legendary documentary filmmaker. By adding smooth zoom and pan motion to a still image, it creates a compelling video that feels alive and dynamic. It's used in every major documentary, news program, and professional video production worldwide.

Steps

  1. Upload a photo — drag & drop or click Browse. JPG, PNG, and WebP are supported.
  2. Choose a motion effect — Zoom In, Zoom Out, Pan, Ken Burns Classic, or Random.
  3. Select duration — 3, 4, or 5 seconds.
  4. Click "Create Video" — renders in real time, then shows a preview you can download.

Motion Effects Explained

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Ken Burns effect?

The Ken Burns effect is a cinematic technique that applies smooth zoom and pan movements to still images, creating the illusion of motion and depth. It's named after documentary filmmaker Ken Burns and is used in documentaries, news broadcasts, and professional video productions worldwide.

What image formats are supported?

JPG, PNG, and WebP images up to 20 MB are supported. Higher resolution images produce sharper output videos since the zoom animation magnifies the image slightly.

How long does rendering take?

Rendering happens in real time in your browser — a 4-second video takes about 4 seconds to render. You can watch the progress bar advance frame by frame.

Is my photo uploaded anywhere?

No. Everything runs 100% locally in your browser using the HTML5 Canvas and MediaRecorder APIs. Your image is never sent to any server.

What format is the output video?

The output is a WebM video (VP9 or VP8 codec), supported by Chrome, Firefox, and Edge. Most video editors (VLC, DaVinci Resolve, Premiere, CapCut) can open WebM files.

Does it work in Safari?

Safari does not support the MediaRecorder API needed to create WebM video. Please use Chrome, Firefox, or Edge for best results.