Video Blur is a video tool that runs in your browser. Configure Gaussian blur radius, edge clamp modes, and region-of-interest boxes for privacy redaction or depth-of-field fakes. The page you are reading is the same workspace you will use to do the work: pick a file or paste your input, choose the options that matter to you, and the tool produces the result on your device.
Technically, the work is done by FFmpeg compiled to WebAssembly, loaded as part of the page. Inputs in MP4, WebM, MOV, MKV, AVI, FLV, and OGV format are recognised automatically and validated before the engine begins processing. Files up to 500 MB are supported per run; that ceiling keeps browser memory usage stable on a wide range of devices.
Video Blur is a static page plus a client-side engine. The browser does the work; there is no separate backend in the loop for the actual processing. That architecture is why the tool starts immediately, why it does not depend on the load on a remote service, and why running multiple jobs in a row does not slow it down.
Typical users of Video Blur include event organisers sharing highlight footage, creators trimming short clips and support agents preparing screen recordings. The thread connecting all of them is the same: a focused video editing and conversion task that fits cleanly into a browser tab and benefits from a tool with sensible defaults and minimal setup.
Video Blur is shaped for the gap between "I'll do it by hand" and "I'll script it." When the job is small enough that automating it would take longer than doing it, but annoying enough to want a focused tool — that is the situation this page is built for.
The hard constraints are easy to remember. Maximum input: 500 MB. Multiple files per run: no — one input at a time, by design, to keep results predictable. The same controls apply on every run.
If your task needs more than one step, chain Video Blur with Video Fade, Video Brightness & Contrast, and Video Saturation. Each tool produces output that is a clean input to the next, so multi-step workflows are just a matter of opening the next tool in a new tab and continuing.
Video Blur keeps the control set focused. Every option on the page is there because a real workflow needs it, and the defaults aim at the most common case so a first-time user can get the right output without changing any settings.
The download is delivered as `{name}-edited.{ext}` the moment processing completes — no email link, no "your result will be ready in 5 minutes" queue, no expiry timer. The file is generated in your browser and saved by your browser's normal download flow.
A short note on how Video Blur came to look the way it does: every iteration started by watching how someone unfamiliar with the tool actually used it, then removing whatever got in their way. That is why the upload area dominates the screen, the run button is bigger than the secondary controls, and the result panel is unmissable when the job finishes.
Video Blur produces deterministic output: the same input plus the same options always produces the same result. That predictability matters when the result has to match an upstream specification or be reproducible later.
A few practical tips that experienced users of Video Blur pick up over time. First, keep your default browser updated — the engine relies on standard web APIs and newer browser versions are noticeably faster than ones from a few years ago. Second, close other heavy tabs before processing a large input; the engine shares CPU and memory with whatever else is open. Third, if you re-run the same kind of job often, your last-used settings are remembered for the rest of the tab session, so subsequent runs are essentially one click.
Common gotchas worth flagging: Video Blur only accepts MP4, WebM, MOV, MKV, AVI, FLV, and OGV, so if your file is in another format you will need to convert it first. The 500 MB ceiling is per-file, not per-session; you can run as many separate jobs as you like, but a single oversized input will be rejected on load.
Video Blur is intentionally narrow in scope so the common case is fast and the result is predictable. If you ever need a variation it does not cover, browse the rest of the catalog — there is a good chance an adjacent tool already exists, and switching between tools is just a matter of opening another tab.
A box blur with radius derived from the slider value — fast, separable, and visually similar to a Gaussian blur for video. Higher radii produce more diffuse, dreamy blur but take longer to encode.
Yes — audio is kept untouched and re-encoded to AAC alongside the blurred video.
MP4 with H.264 video and AAC audio. Works in every modern player.
Not in this tool — this applies the same blur to the entire frame. For region-specific privacy blur, you would need a video editor with motion tracking.
Cloud tools run on server CPUs and GPUs but require uploading your file. This tool runs FFmpeg as WebAssembly inside your browser, so processing speed depends on your own hardware. Smaller resolutions, shorter clips, and lower blur radii finish faster.
Completely. Your file never leaves your device — no upload, no account, no watermark.
Up to 500MB. Larger files may exhaust the browser tab's WebAssembly memory.
Video Blur runs in any modern mobile browser — Safari, Chrome, Firefox and the in-app browsers in most messaging apps all support the underlying APIs. Performance depends on the device: a recent phone handles typical inputs nearly as fast as a laptop, while older devices may take a few seconds longer near the 500 MB ceiling. The interface lays out cleanly on small screens, so you do not need to pinch-zoom to see the controls.
Video Blur is a browser-only tool by design and does not expose a hosted API. The reason is the same as the privacy story: there is no Favtoo backend doing the work, so there is no service to call. If you need to script the same transformation, the underlying engine (FFmpeg compiled to WebAssembly) is open-source and can be used directly from your own code.
Most jobs finish in seconds. Speed scales with input size and with how many CPU cycles your browser tab has available — the engine runs in your browser, so it shares resources with whatever else you have open. For inputs near the 500 MB ceiling, expect anywhere from a few seconds to roughly a minute on a typical laptop. Closing other heavy tabs noticeably speeds things up.
Once the page is loaded, Video Blur can complete jobs without an active internet connection — the engine is bundled with the page, so there is no per-job network call. The initial page load does require a connection (to fetch the static assets), but after that you can disconnect entirely and the tool will still work. This is a side-effect of the local-first architecture, not a deliberate "offline mode" feature.
Your file is processed inside your browser by FFmpeg compiled to WebAssembly. The engine reads the file's bytes from your tab's memory, computes the result, and writes the result back into the tab. You can confirm what the page does by opening developer tools and watching the Network tab during a run — the requests you see are for the tool's static assets only.
Video Blur accepts MP4, WebM, MOV, MKV, AVI, FLV, and OGV. If your input is in a format that is not directly supported, convert it first using one of Favtoo's converter tools — every Favtoo converter outputs a file that is a clean input to the next tool in the chain.
Video Blur is a static page running an open-source engine in your browser, so a typical corporate firewall does not get in the way as long as it allows JavaScript and WebAssembly to load from Favtoo. For teams that need to host it themselves on an internal network, the underlying engine (FFmpeg compiled to WebAssembly) is open-source and can be packaged into a private build with the same behaviour. Reach out via the Contact page if that is something you are exploring.
Video Blur works in any modern browser released in the last few years — Chrome, Edge, Firefox, Safari, Brave, Arc and the major Chromium derivatives are all supported. The underlying engine relies on widely-supported web APIs, so there is nothing exotic to install. If you are on a very old browser version and the tool fails to load, updating to the latest release of your preferred browser is the only fix needed.
Video Blur only needs the standard web platform — file picker access for the inputs you choose to load, and optionally clipboard access if you copy the result rather than downloading it. There is no microphone, camera, geolocation or background-permission request, because none of those are needed for the work the tool does. Some browsers prompt the first time WebAssembly is compiled; that is a normal one-time event, not specific to Favtoo.
Video to GIF
Convert any video clip to an animated GIF entirely in your browser. Pick the start, length, frame rate, and width — your file is processed locally with FFmpeg WebAssembly and never uploaded.
Screen Recorder
Record your screen, a window, or a browser tab directly in your browser. Optionally include system audio and your microphone. Capture, preview, and download the video without installing any app — and without uploading anything.
Webcam Recorder
Record your webcam directly in your browser with optional microphone audio. Pick the resolution (480p, 720p, or 1080p), frame rate, and mirror mode, then capture and download the result without installing any app.
Screen + Webcam Recorder
Record your screen with your webcam composited into a picture-in-picture corner — perfect for tutorials, course videos, demos, and reaction recordings. Pick the camera position, size, and audio sources, then capture and download in your browser.
Video Slideshow Maker
Turn a stack of photos into an MP4 slideshow with per-slide durations, crossfades, and an optional soundtrack. Pick the resolution (up to 1080p), frame rate, and transitions, then download a single MP4 — all processed in your browser with FFmpeg WebAssembly.
Video from Images + Audio
Combine a stack of photos with a music track or narration into a single MP4 video. Pick the resolution, per-slide duration, transitions, and let the slideshow length match the audio. All processed in your browser with FFmpeg WebAssembly.
Video Trimmer
Set precise in and out timestamps, snap to keyframes when needed, and document handles for social-safe cutdowns.
Video Splitter
Split any video into 2–10 equal-length pieces, packaged as a downloadable ZIP. Files are processed entirely in your browser with FFmpeg WebAssembly using lossless stream-copy.