1. (Probably the most time consuming). Obtaining your images. Using WinTVGo,
I try to find a scene that would make a good gif. Then I try to capture screen
shots with just a bit of movement in between...such as an arm rising.
(NOTE: Remember, the more images you use, the larger the gif, the larger
the gif the more time it takes to load and the more bandwidth it uses. I learned
this the hard way as some of my gifs are quite large.)
2. Determine what size you want your gif (I make mine pretty small, usually
105w by 80h.) Then crop and resize your images. I use Adobe Photoshop to do
this. IMPORTANT: Make sure your images are named in the sequence you want
them to display....such as gifpic1.jpg, gifpic2.jpg, etc.
3. Once all of the images are sized and ready, move them to a directory all
their own. In other words, no other files should be in the directory you
use. This directory is also considered your FOLDER.
4. Get into Adobe ImageReady, click on "FILE" come down and click on "IMPORT"
then "FOLDER AS FRAMES". Open the directory (FOLDER) where you stored your
images. You'll notice each image will display in sequence on what's called
your animation palette.
5. On the right side of your animation palette is a black button pointing to
the right, click on it. Select "Flatten Frames into Layers". Once that
selection has completed, select "Optimize animation". Optimization reduces
the file size while still retaining the image quality. In the optimize
box, I have both "Bounding Box" and "Redundant Pixel Removal" checked.
6. Now you are ready to put your delay time in between each frame. (You'll
notice if you run your gif now, it is very fast.) On the bottom of each
frame is "Sec" with a small button pointing down...click on that. Give it
a delay that will work best. Personally, I use .2 sec with 2.0 sec on the
last frame so it stops briefly at the end. Just keep running and stopping
the animation until you like what you see.
7. Finally, you are ready to save your gif!! Click on "FILE" and choose
"SAVE OPTIMIZED AS". Determine the directory you want to save it in and
give it a catchy name. You'll notice it will now have the file extension
of ".gif". YEAH...YOU DID IT! It's a moving picture.