That's probably also the reason why the Adobe converter tool has it build in. To do this with full blown video edit software everytime is very cumbersome. Or maybe a pre-stage as a check view or way to send the video to a college/client etc. But sometimes they are the end result of a render and you only want to convert them to mp4. Yes, a lot of times they are meant to be used in video edits. Either from a vfx tool like After Effects or Fusion or 3D modelling software, like Maya, Max, Blender etc. Lots of motion graphics professionals work with image sequences. As I understand it Handbrake is meant to be a conversion tool, and converting image sequences to video is a very common use case expected from video converters. ![]() For example the Adobe Media Encoder can also read sequences directly without an editor - it is just not that good at encoding. I disagree though, that only editors should be able to read image sequences.
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