Two Editing Workflows in My FFmpeg Commander Toolbox (And When I Use Each One)

Holding Bin vs Workbench: The Two Ways I Edit Video in Ray’s FFmpeg Commander Toolbox

A lot of people ask which workflow they should use first. Short answer: both are useful, but for different jobs.
Here’s the practical breakdown I use in real projects.

Quick rule: If you’re building a story from many clips, use Holding Bin + Timeline.
It also supports clip effects and text overlays right in the timeline. If you’re processing existing files fast, use Workbench.

1) Holding Bin + Timeline Workflow (non-destructive, edit-first)

This is the workflow I use when I want to assemble a full edit: add clips, trim, reorder, apply transitions,
add effects, add text overlays, and export final deliverables. The source files stay untouched until render time.

Holding Bin / Timeline
Holding Bin and timeline view
Holding Bin workflow demo
Short loop: add clips → arrange timeline → export.

Best for:

Highlight reels, story edits, multi-clip projects, and any job where you want clean non-destructive control.

2) Workbench Workflow (direct processing, speed-first)

Workbench is what I use when I already have files and want to apply effects/transcodes directly.
It’s simpler, faster to run, and great for quick deliverables or batch-style operations.

Workbench
Workbench editing view
Workbench workflow demo
Short loop: select clip → apply effect stack → convert/export.

Side-by-side comparison

Category Holding Bin + Timeline Workbench
Main goal Build a complete edit from multiple clips Process existing clips quickly
Editing style Sequencing, trimming, transitions, effects, text overlays, timeline composition Direct effect/convert workflow on source files
Speed to first output Medium (more setup, more flexibility) Fast (less setup, direct output)
Best use case Narrative edits, reels, assembled projects Batch cleanup, quick versions, direct conversions

My recommendation

Start with the workflow that matches the job. If you’re still deciding, begin in Workbench for speed,
then switch to Holding Bin when you need full timeline control.

If you want to try both workflows in one app, visit Ray’s FFmpeg Commander Toolbox:

Ray’s FFmpeg Commander Toolbox

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