I'll think about it. In the meantime, I have a few pro tips that may be useful.
One trick is you can drag the icon from the QuickTime's window's title bar (or command click on it to reveal it in the Finder). Along with the ability to drag things while doing Cmd-Tab and Cmd-` that was added to macOS at some point, it makes it fairly easy to do drag and drop to other apps.
You can also use the Open Clips Folder menu item in the RetroClip menu.
Finally, you can also just disable the banner for RetroClip using the notification center system preferences and have it be stealth, just like screenshots are, and then just navigate to the ~/Movies/RetroClip folder in the Finder directly.
One trick is you can drag the icon from the QuickTime's window's title bar (or command click on it to reveal it in the Finder). Along with the ability to drag things while doing Cmd-Tab and Cmd-` that was added to macOS at some point, it makes it fairly easy to do drag and drop to other apps.
You can also use the Open Clips Folder menu item in the RetroClip menu.
Finally, you can also just disable the banner for RetroClip using the notification center system preferences and have it be stealth, just like screenshots are, and then just navigate to the ~/Movies/RetroClip folder in the Finder directly.