First frame, cleanly extracted
The opening frame of any GIF becomes a standalone JPG. An animated loop collapses to the one still you meant to keep.
Drop your GIFs. Pick a fill color for any transparent areas. Download a still JPG of the first frame that opens anywhere. No account, no upload, no watermark.
Drop your GIFs to convert them to JPG
GIF Β· up to 50 files Β· 100 MB each
A GIF is really a container: it may hold a single image or a whole sequence of frames in a loop. This converter reads only the first frame and writes it out as a JPG, so any motion in the original is left behind. What comes back is one frozen picture β the opening moment of the animation as an ordinary photo file. If the GIF was never animated, that frame simply is the image, and the conversion is a clean, exact swap.
GIF has just one kind of transparency: a pixel is either fully visible or fully invisible. JPG has none. So when a GIF carries transparent regions, those gaps have to be painted in. AnyResizer hands you the brush: a fill-color control sets what shows where the transparency was, starting at white but open to any shade that suits where the JPG will sit. When the cut-out edges matter more than reach, convert to PNG instead.
One honest caveat: a color-limited GIF will not regain color it never held β a photo squeezed into a 256-shade palette stays that way, and JPG simply wraps it in a compact, portable still. Quality defaults to 90 and metadata is stripped. One GIF saves on the spot; a folder returns as a ZIP with proper .jpg names.
The opening frame of any GIF becomes a standalone JPG. An animated loop collapses to the one still you meant to keep.
GIFs with cut-out areas get a color control. Choose what fills the gaps, and the flattened JPG matches your background.
Decoding and re-encoding happen right on your own machine, so a GIF you convert never travels to a server or anyone else's computer.
Need a poster image for a GIF clip? Pull its first frame as a JPG and use it as the thumbnail a player expects.
Applications, listings, and profile pages often take JPG only. Convert the GIF first and the upload sails straight through.
Want to send just the opening shot, not the whole animation? A flat JPG is easy to attach or post.
Word, PowerPoint, and older editors embed JPG cleanly, where a GIF may misbehave or animate when you never meant it to.
Print kiosks and photo labs work in JPG. Turn the frame you want into a JPG, ready to print.
A static JPG loads fast and behaves predictably in a feed, where a heavy animated GIF can drag the whole page down.
Drop in one GIF or as many as fifty. Every file inherits the same settings until you tweak one on its own.
Where a GIF has transparency, set the replacement color. Fill starts at white, quality at 90 β nudge either as needed.
One GIF downloads as a single JPG. A batch arrives as a ZIP, each frame renamed with a .jpg extension.
Only the first frame is captured. If a later moment is the one you want, reorder the GIF so it comes first.
Match the fill to the surface the JPG will land on. A bright fill dropped onto a dark background reads as a hard-edged block.
Converting a palette-limited GIF will not bring back lost color β JPG just gives you a smaller, more portable still image.
If the transparent edges need to survive, reach for GIF to PNG instead. JPG has no way to hold them.
Convert between JPG, PNG, WebP, AVIF, HEIC, GIF, BMP, TIFF, and SVG in one place.
Keep transparency and stay lossless β take a GIF's first frame as a PNG.
Go the other way and turn a photo into a static, single-frame GIF.
Take the JPG you just made and shrink it further with no obvious quality loss.
Resize by exact pixels, percentage, or longest edge.
Drop your GIFs below, set a fill color for any transparency, and download flat JPGs that open on any device.