I taught myself to make gifs this year because I was deeply annoyed that a show with a cast dominated by polynesian actors had a tag almost exclusively filled by the two white cast members. Haterism can be an excellent motivator.
Even if you do not have hate in your heart but do want to make gifs of your favorite thing (sports. I'm hoping it's sports), I've made a very basic tutorial under the cut of how I make gifs using exclusively free programs. I am still figuring this out, and things like coloring etc. are not my gift, so I welcome tips, tricks, and tutorials from other people. This is mostly for people coming in at the ground floor like I did as there are heaps of tutorials for how to make your gifs look nice once you've already got the basics.
& a moment for my soapbox for sports giffing specifically: I like to think of gifs as a form of game preservation. we're saving tiny moments that will be forgotten and will disappear otherwise. who cares if you think your gifs aren't as good as others on here? you're saving something maybe no one else is, and people 5+ years from now are gonna be delighted to dig up those moments.
first thing you're gonna need to do is screen record. i use obs studio because it is open source and doesn't put a watermark on videos. there are a bunch of tutorials on how to use it.
Next, create your basic gif. this is where my pal and yours, Canva, comes in. other people I know swear by ezgif. I find canva easier for picking the desired length, but ezgif is great for making longer gifs, in my experience. How to do the canva way is below.
1. create a design by selecting video. unless I'm using an instagram video or similar, I select video (Landscape). you'll be able to crop later.
2. upload the videos you're going to turn into gifs. I've started making game folders so that it's easier to caption gifs later, but they can all go in the video folder.
3. Drag your video of choice into the editing area, then cut the length to the section you want to gif. 3-4 seconds is my sweet spot because of tumblr gif size restrictions (note this is why ezgif may be preferable for something longer).
4. double click video and crop. This isn't required as you can crop during editing, but unless you pay for canva, there are size/quality limitations, so cropping in canva can help quality.
5. once it's how you want it, click on share -> download. in the file type, select gif, and download.
photopea
1. once you've opened the gif(s) you want to work on, you are going to select all of the layers (see bottom, right corner). if you need to crop, you can do that now. I nearly always keep my gifs at 16:9 ratio, but you can mess around with that here.
2. Resize your gif. on tumblr, that means a width of 540 pixels. this will make your life infinitely easier for every step after this as the larger the image, the longer it will take to load. image -> image size. you can technically stop here, but the next couple steps make my gifs look a little nicer than what pops out from canva.
3. filter -> sharpen -> smart sharpen. I do this twice. the first time I do between 150% - 180%, 0.5 px, and the second time I do 10%, 10 px. mess around with it. other people have incredibly sharp gifs. these numbers are what I've come up with based on other tutorials for non-sports gifs. I have another pal that prefers 200%, .3-6 px.
4. image -> adjustment -> curves. this can help with some of the color correction, but be careful. this is also the step where a lot of gif makers whitewash people of color all to hell. do not do that.
5. image -> adjustment -> color balance. I mostly mess with midtones, but in range, you can also play around with highlights and shadows to get the color you want.
6. image -> adjustment -> selective color. I like to push black in my gifs between 5-20%, & I'll sometimes mess around with other colors depending on the team, but this is one of those steps that is not required at all.
7. sizing, resizing, and making it fit for tumblr size restrictions. file -> export as -> gif
often, I end up with a gif that's too big. I can mess around with quality to get it under 10 MB, but if quality starts to get too low, it means I've got to get rid of some layers.
cut layers from the front and back of the gif (you can also do this if you originally have a gif from canva/ezgif that has extra scenes/layers you don't want). select the layer you want to get rid of and hit the garbage can on the bottom far right. the little eye on the left of the photos will let you go through each layer individually.
once it's done, you can export as gif and upload.
if you're still stuck with size -- give ezgif a shot. it allows you more flexibility to make longer gifs at smaller sizes.
hope this makes sense and that people go out and make a bunch of gifs of their favorite fourth liner or off the bench player or the top player who for some reasons doesn't get love.
The once-hot Silicon Valley startup has seen its stock’s value decline 99% and is struggling to survive. That has put the spotlight on the g
Folks -- if these people have any of your data, this is a really good time to DELETE IT. They're circling the drain, and there's no way to tell who'll get their mitts on that data once they fully go under.
“my mother’s brother” “his daughter’s son’s children” “his mother’s brother and father” “my’s son’s son” “my father’s sister” i am going to throw these books against the wall holy shit
We report in the aftermath of a rainy day: we had been waiting for a good, long stretch of rain for many days. We watch it go a little too fast, we think. Now the sunset rings out on the glistening asphalt, wrung out clouds still dripping a little, shredded in the wind.
ABBY HOWARD!! Let me touch Reese's tail AND MY LIFE! IS YOURS!!! I love this game so much genuinely the next instance I have downtime at work I want to tattoo ditchlings on myself as gap filler.