Guide

How to use a scenepack.

New to scenepacks? This guide walks you through downloading clips from ofxscenes, importing them into the editor you already use, and turning them into a finished edit you can share.

What is a scenepack?

A scenepack (also written "scene pack") is a collection of short, high-quality clips of a specific character, moment, or theme from a film, series, game, or sport. Editors use them as raw material for fan edits, lyric edits, transitions, and short-form social video. ofxscenes clips are 4K wherever possible, so they downscale cleanly for TikTok, Reels, YouTube Shorts, and full-HD edits alike.

Step 1 — Pick a scenepack

Open the ofxscenes library, search for the show or character you want, and open the scenepack page. Each show is broken down into seasons and characters, so you can grab exactly the clips you need instead of a single giant archive.

Step 2 — Download the files

Click Download on a character card. Most scenepacks ship as a single .zip of individual clips. Save it somewhere you'll remember and extract the archive before importing — most editors won't read clips from inside a zip.

Step 3 — Import into your editor

After Effects: File → Import → File, select the extracted folder, and choose "Import folder" to keep clips grouped. Drag a clip into a new composition to start editing.

Premiere Pro: Drag the extracted folder straight into the Project panel. Premiere creates a matching bin; double-click a clip to load it into the Source monitor.

CapCut: Tap "New project", then "Add" and select the clips. CapCut auto-trims so you can drop them on the timeline immediately.

Alight Motion: Create a new project, tap "+" on the timeline, and pick the clips from your gallery.

Step 4 — Cut, color, and export

Cut on the beat of your audio, layer presets or transitions, and keep clips short — most viral edits use cuts under one second. Export at 1080p for social platforms and 4K only when the destination supports it.

Credit and fair use

Scenepacks are clips of copyrighted material shared for transformative, non-commercial fan editing. Credit the original show and the scenepack uploader when you can, and respect any platform rules around copyrighted audio and video.