![]() From there, select Other and set the frame delay. ♦ Select all the frames you have left (select the first one, press Shift, select the last one), then click on 0,04. Set the frame delay (aka the speed of your gif) Note: The more frames your gif has, the ‘heavier’ it’ll be, therefore the less quality it’ll have. ♦ The selected range might give you way too many frames so what you want to do is delete all the frames you don’t need. Step 4. Keep only the frames that you want to include in your gif Sometimes my PS does it automatically but sometimes it doesn’t, I don’t really know why) (after that you might have to click Window > Animation so that you can see every one of your frames at the bottom of your screen. ♦ Most of the time, I check Limit To Every 2 Frames (and keep it at 2), except when the moment I want to gif is particularly short, then I just don’t check it. This will be very approximate if your video is long. ♦ To select a range from your video, move your cursor where the desired moment begins (approximately), press shift on your keyboard, and then slowly move your cursor to where the moment ends. ♦ File > Import > Video Frames to Layers… (I always download them in MP4) Note: Obviously, the higher the quality of the video is, the higher quality your gif will be. Step 1. Download your video in a format that’s compatible with Photoshop. ![]() Also there’s more than one way to make gifs but this is what I do. I use Photoshop CS5 but you can make this using other versions of Photoshop as well. I’ll try to make this as detailed as I can and explain even the basics in case someone is very new to this. ![]()
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