Movie Clip Data-Blocks

Movie Clip data-blocks store video files and image sequences used for motion tracking, masking, and compositing.

They are primarily used in the Movie Clip Editor, but can also be referenced by nodes and other systems that support video input.

Creating a Movie Clip

Movie Clips can be created by:

When a file is loaded, a Movie Clip data-block is created and stored in the current Blend file.

Properties

The Movie Clip data-block provides the following main properties:

File Path

The path to the video file or image sequence on disk.

Start Frame

Defines the scene frame that corresponds to the first frame of the clip. This allows aligning footage with the timeline.

Frame Offset

Offsets the clip’s internal frame numbering without changing its placement in the scene timeline. This is useful when syncing footage that does not start at frame 1.

Color Space

Specifies the Color Space that the image file was saved in. This information is used to correctly convert the image to Blender’s internal linear color space, which is used for all color computations and rendering.

Textures and final renders are often stored in sRGB, while OpenEXR images are stored in a linear color space. Some images such as normal, bump or stencil maps do not strictly contain “colors” and should never have a color conversion applied to them. For such images, the color space should be set to Non-Color.

The list of color spaces depends on the active OCIO config. The default supported color spaces are described in detail here: Default OpenColorIO Configuration.

Usage

Movie Clips are most commonly used for:

Multiple Movie Clip data-blocks can exist in a single Blend file, allowing different footage sources to be used in the same project.

Data-Block Management

Movie Clips are regular Blender data-blocks and can be managed in the Outliner.

They support:

  • Renaming.

  • Fake User (to prevent automatic removal when unused).

  • Unlinking from editors or nodes.

Note

Removing a Movie Clip data-block from the Blend file does not delete the original media file from disk.