Launched this week

ClipFlow
Small video jobs, without a timeline
101 followers
Small video jobs, without a timeline
101 followers
ClipFlow handles the small video jobs that do not need a timeline. Trim, join, compress, reverse, filter, caption, mute, blur, or convert a clip, then continue with the result. Version 1.9 adds partial reverse and 13 filter styles. Most processing runs on device.













ClipFlow
Love the "no timeline" framing — most video tools assume you want a full editor when really you just need one clip trimmed or one shot dropped in. Curious how you're handling model/rendering under the hood for quick jobs like this — are you generating anything AI-side, or purely editing existing footage? Ask because balancing speed vs. quality is the constant tension on the generation side of video tools too.
ClipFlow
@abhineetarora Thanks! ClipFlow is focused on editing existing footage — no AI video generation in the pipeline. The goal is to keep small edits fast, predictable, and private by processing on-device.
@faichou_zh That makes sense — on-device processing for predictability and privacy is a smart tradeoff, especially since AI generation introduces exactly the kind of variability you'd want to avoid for quick trims. It's interesting how "no AI" is becoming its own differentiator in a space that's otherwise racing toward generation-everything. Good luck with the launch!
The no-timeline framing is spot on — as an indie iOS dev I mostly just need to trim + caption a quick clip, and opening a full editor for that is overkill. Love that most of it runs on device. Are the captions auto-generated, and does the on-device export keep the original resolution?
ClipFlow
@lennoxbeflying Exactly the use case we built it for. Captions are auto-generated, and exports preserve the original resolution whenever the selected edit allows it.
The pipeline that lets you keep editing the output of your last action without re-importing is a really thoughtful touch, the kind of small detail that makes quick clip work feel fluid instead of fiddly.
ClipFlow
@mesutnevin Really appreciate that — we wanted each result to feel like the next starting point, not a dead end that makes you import everything again.
A keyboard shortcut for trimming would be amazing, like hitting a hotkey to set in and out points without scrubbing with the mouse. Also would love to see a simple batch queue so I can line up a few clips and walk away while it processes them one after another.
ClipFlow
@cosanalper66074 Thanks! ClipFlow is touch-first on iPhone and iPad for now, so no keyboard shortcuts or batch queue yet — but I appreciate the suggestions.
Tried it on a phone for trimming and adding a quick filter, and it handled the clip without uploading anything. The on-device processing makes it feel way faster than the editors I usually use for this kind of small job.
ClipFlow
@smet1510713 Thanks for trying it! Keeping processing on-device was a big priority — faster for small edits, and your clips stay on your phone.
One thing I'd love to see is a way to save a custom sequence of edits as a preset. I often do the same trim, mute, and caption steps for short clips, and being able to chain them and reuse the flow with one tap would be a huge time saver.
ClipFlow
@saadetjh1c That would be super useful. Reusable edit flows/presets are definitely something we’re considering, especially for repeatable short-form workflows.