![]() Logic would say the animation would get faster by going from. 01 delay and below, I don't understand the technical explanation to that but just avoid it. And note, this is all for a frame animations (which for beginners seem to be a lot simpler than a video animation with shapes and automated motion etc, plus this is how someone would edit and existing GIF in photoshop). They have all been helpful to me and maybe someone else might find them helpful down the road too. davescm, if you have any insights here they are more than welcome. just wanted to share my final realizations with all this. Thank you! I am sure there is a simple solution but I can't find one anywhere!Īnd to put a cap on this. 01 exported GIFs LESS smooth then the original? 01 exported GIFs slower than the original GIF (which was exported the same way and had a frame delay od. 07 seconds, the GIF then gets a little faster, but still slower than the original. Then when I increase the the frame delay to. This in itself is super strange to me as you think it would get faster: ![]() When I import it into photoshop and show the timeline (so its a frame animation) it automatically has a frame delay of. To provide more detail, here is the original GIF. And while I understand the browser issue, I am viewing these GIFs in relation to one another, and they are all using the same playback so this would cancel out.So I am only talking about exported GIFs.I wanted to get a few things together as to not waste your time (as I REALLY appreciate you responding). Davescm Thanks for the reply and sorry for the delay. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |