![]() ![]() Now select all the frames in the animation window, and click the frame duration button under one of them (the one that says 0.01sec or something), and choose the speed.įor 25fps videos to play at original speed: They’ll probably end up in opposite order, so click that button again and choose Reverse Frames. Now click the button I’ve highlighted in pink and choose Make Frames From Layers. Open your animation window ( window -> timeline, or possibly ‘animation’ in earlier version), then click 'create frame animation’ (or simply make sure it’s in frame animation mode). Then click ok, and wait while photoshop loads all the frames as layers. Click browse, find the folder you saved your frames to and select them. Now you have your frames, go to file -> scripts -> load files into stack. If it’s a long scene, you might want to delete ½ or 2/3 of the frames so you only get every second or third frame, before you import them. Arqueete already made a tutorial for this, which you can read here, see Part One. Whenever that doesn’t work or is impractical (like if it’s a very long scene), you can extract the frames first and then import them, which you can do with Avidemux. This also lets you choose whether to just take ever 2nd or 3rd frames, which is helpful if you want longer gifs. ![]() So, if you have quicktime and photoshop CS5 or newer, you can simply go in Photoshop and do file -> import -> video frames to layers, and find the appropriate part in your video. I’m using CS6, but a lot/most of it applies to earlier versions of Photoshop too. Saviltride asked for a tutorial on this gifset and hey, and since I can’t seem to find a proper tutorial for even my basic process (or rather my method is combined from multiple tutorials), I’m gonna cover how to make gifs from scratch, possibly kind of ridiculously in-depth. ![]()
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