Disclaimer: Only use FFmpeg on video files you own (DVD, Blu-ray, or purchased digital downloads stripped of DRM for personal backup). I am not condoning piracy; I am condoning smart archiving. The centerpiece of S03E05 is the print shop reunion (timestamp ~45:00–51:00 in most 1080p releases). Claire walks in, Jamie turns around, and time stops. You want a clip that starts when her hand touches the door and ends right after his whispered, “Ye look well, Claire.”
Let’s extract from 00:41:20 to 00:43:10 , but with a twist: add a 2-second fade-out so it doesn’t end abruptly. (Note: fading requires re-encoding, but for a short clip, it’s worth it.) outlander s03e05 ffmpeg
Because those tools re-encode your video, which destroys quality. FFmpeg can perform using copy codecs. That means the moors of Scotland look exactly as crisp as they do on your Blu-ray rip. FFmpeg also batch-processes, scales, and converts audio—perfect for turning that final emotional monologue into an MP3 for your commute. Disclaimer: Only use FFmpeg on video files you