

Once you’ve set your options and previewed your final GIF go ahead and hit that ‘Save’ button.įrom the GIFGun panel you can hit a little gear icon that will open up your settings. Looping Options: Will your GIF play once, loop forever, or loop for a certain number of times?.The bicubic options are smoother with Bicubic Smoother being best for enlargements and Bicubic sharper being best for image reductions. Nearest Neighbor and Bilinear can be harsh. Quality: Selects the way in which your new file resolution will be interpreted.Percent: The change in resolution size from the video file in %.Image Size: Come on… I don’t want to be patronizing here….Metadata is extra information stored inside of your image file. Metadata: Selects the metadata information that is stored on your final image.Preview: Selects the color profile for the preview box to the left.Convert to sRGB: Converts your GIF’s colors to web-browser supported colors.The higher the Lossy % the more noise and pixelation you’ll see in your final image. Lossy: The amount of compression in your final GIF.Web Snap: Adjust this slider to change your colors to web-safe colors.
Make gif smaller full#
This can allow your audience to see your GIF before the full image loads. This allows your GIF to load at a faster, lower resolution before the full GIF is loaded.

Selective to Adaptive: This menu relates to your reduction settings.I recommend using as few colors as possible to reduce the file size. One of the things that makes Photoshop so great is it’s ability to give you an estimated file size in the lower left hand corner of the frame.įrom the preset menu at the top you can select a number of GIF presets based on the number of colors and noise in your image. Now that you’re inside the Save for Web menu it’s time to adjust some of the settings.
