Grid Video Filter

Divides the clip into a repeated tiled layout, displaying multiple scaled copies of the same video in a regular grid.
The filter duplicates the source image spatially; it does not crop different regions of the frame. Every cell shows the entire clip, scaled to fit.

Grid is a spatial replication effect, not a layout or masking tool.

Parameters

Rows (0.0 - 100.0%)

Controls the number of vertical divisions in the grid.

  • 0.0%
    No vertical subdivision. The clip is shown once, filling the frame.

  • Low values (≈5 - 15%)
    A small number of rows. On a 1080p project, the default value (10%) typically results in 3 rows.

  • Higher values
    More rows are added. Each tile becomes shorter vertically as the grid density increases.

Important behavior notes:

  • The percentage value does not correspond directly to a row count.
  • The mapping is non-linear and resolution-dependent; exact row numbers cannot be inferred from the slider value.
  • Increasing Rows reduces the vertical resolution of each tile.

Columns (0.0 - 100.0%)

Controls the number of horizontal divisions in the grid.

  • 0.0%
    No horizontal subdivision. The clip is shown once, filling the frame.

  • Low values (≈5 - 15%)
    A small number of columns. At the default value (10%), this typically results in 3 columns on a 1080p project.

  • Higher values
    More columns are added. Each tile becomes narrower as the grid density increases.

Important behavior notes:

  • Like Rows, the percentage does not map linearly to a column count.
  • The effective number of columns depends on project resolution.
  • Increasing Columns reduces the horizontal resolution of each tile.

Keyframes

Both Rows and Columns can be keyframed.

This enables:

  • Animating from a single full-frame view into a tiled grid
  • Dynamic changes in grid density over time
  • Zoom-like transitions that break the frame into multiple repeating views

Parameter interaction

Rows and Columns are independent but cumulative:

  • Increasing both increases the total number of tiles multiplicatively (rows × columns).
  • Increasing only one creates a strip layout (vertical or horizontal repetition).
  • High values on both sliders can rapidly reduce per-tile clarity due to downscaling.

Visual characteristics

  • Repeated copies of the same video filling the frame
  • Uniform grid with equal-sized tiles
  • All tiles remain time-synchronized
  • No borders or spacing between tiles
  • Image detail decreases as grid density increases

Recommended use cases

  • Stylized visual effects or motion graphics
  • Abstract or experimental repetition patterns
  • Visual emphasis on rhythm or motion
  • Transitions from a single image to a multi-view layout
  • Background textures using animated video content

Limitations

  • Cannot display different parts of the image in different cells
  • No direct numeric control over exact row or column count
  • No control over spacing, borders, or offsets
  • High grid densities can make motion hard to read due to heavy downscaling