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- goldfish678
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1000+ posts
How do I compress an Animated GIF?
I'm trying to set my profile picture to an Animated GIF and it's too large. HOW THE HECK DO I COMPRESS IT?
- CaelanD
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49 posts
How do I compress an Animated GIF?
I'm trying to set my profile picture to an Animated GIF and it's too large. HOW THE HECK DO I COMPRESS IT?
Are Your Pictures All n by n pixels? (A square?)
Last edited by CaelanD (April 12, 2014 08:14:08)
- goldfish678
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1000+ posts
How do I compress an Animated GIF?
Oh, in a project, yeah… Here ya go http://scratch.mit.edu/projects/20705922/How? Show us the gif.
- blueservine
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500+ posts
How do I compress an Animated GIF?
Here's a nice trick.
Open GIMP. It's free, if you don't have it, download it.
Drag whatever picture you want into it. The box at the right side of the screen will show all of the ‘layers’. In this case, they will be your frames. If you want one frame to be longer than another, right click on it, select ‘edit properties’, and add after the name, in parentheses, how many milliseconds you want it to last. Eg, 3000ms (three seconds), 500ms(.5 seconds), so on.
When you have all of your frames arranged, (they will play in order of that from top to bottom), click on the ‘filters’ tab in the main window. Scroll down, and at the bottom should be an option called ‘Optimize (for GIF)’. Select that, it will run, and a new window will open up. This will have all of your layers, but they will look strangely sheared, missing a bunch of pixels. This is completely normal.
In this window, go to ‘File’, ‘Export’, and save your file as a .gif. When another window pops up, select in the ‘Frame disposal’ option, ‘Cumulative’. This means your frames will layer on top of each other as the gif plays.
Finish exporting it, open up the gif, and make sure it's satisfactory. If it is, you can close GIMP now. If it's not, make more adjustments.
But anyways, that should lower the size of the file.
Open GIMP. It's free, if you don't have it, download it.
Drag whatever picture you want into it. The box at the right side of the screen will show all of the ‘layers’. In this case, they will be your frames. If you want one frame to be longer than another, right click on it, select ‘edit properties’, and add after the name, in parentheses, how many milliseconds you want it to last. Eg, 3000ms (three seconds), 500ms(.5 seconds), so on.
When you have all of your frames arranged, (they will play in order of that from top to bottom), click on the ‘filters’ tab in the main window. Scroll down, and at the bottom should be an option called ‘Optimize (for GIF)’. Select that, it will run, and a new window will open up. This will have all of your layers, but they will look strangely sheared, missing a bunch of pixels. This is completely normal.
In this window, go to ‘File’, ‘Export’, and save your file as a .gif. When another window pops up, select in the ‘Frame disposal’ option, ‘Cumulative’. This means your frames will layer on top of each other as the gif plays.
Finish exporting it, open up the gif, and make sure it's satisfactory. If it is, you can close GIMP now. If it's not, make more adjustments.
But anyways, that should lower the size of the file.
- goldfish678
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1000+ posts
How do I compress an Animated GIF?
http://i.imgur.com/oaqVvkL.gifThank you!
- luiysia
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500+ posts
How do I compress an Animated GIF?
if you have photoshop, I think you can save for web and devices and there's a lossiness slider (marked “lossy”)
- jji7skyline
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1000+ posts
How do I compress an Animated GIF?
/This Here's a nice trick.
Open GIMP. It's free, if you don't have it, download it.
Drag whatever picture you want into it. The box at the right side of the screen will show all of the ‘layers’. In this case, they will be your frames. If you want one frame to be longer than another, right click on it, select ‘edit properties’, and add after the name, in parentheses, how many milliseconds you want it to last. Eg, 3000ms (three seconds), 500ms(.5 seconds), so on.
When you have all of your frames arranged, (they will play in order of that from top to bottom), click on the ‘filters’ tab in the main window. Scroll down, and at the bottom should be an option called ‘Optimize (for GIF)’. Select that, it will run, and a new window will open up. This will have all of your layers, but they will look strangely sheared, missing a bunch of pixels. This is completely normal.
In this window, go to ‘File’, ‘Export’, and save your file as a .gif. When another window pops up, select in the ‘Frame disposal’ option, ‘Cumulative’. This means your frames will layer on top of each other as the gif plays.
Finish exporting it, open up the gif, and make sure it's satisfactory. If it is, you can close GIMP now. If it's not, make more adjustments.
But anyways, that should lower the size of the file.
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