![]() You also can use Premiere to apply the same lighting effects and whatnot to a series of clips. Good-quality batch GIF exporting is basically the holy grail of gif-related features, at least when your hobby is making giant shitposts full of gifs. Premiere has a steep learning curve, but it is full of good features. I’m finding about half of my gifs look good, and half have annoying white dots in them.īut this is all so fast that it’s worth doing anyway worst case I’ve done my lighting mods in premiere, which is fast, and just have to export half of the mp4′s from photoshop for proper diffusion. Premiere offers no options for dither or optimization of your gifs, so based on lighting, how strong your highlights are, etc, you can get results that have a lot of artifacts dark indoor scenes with brightly lit actors seem especially bad. Edit after multiple additional experiments: the quality is not predictable. They look pretty much the same to me, which is not something I’ve found from experiments in previous years. I used the Animated Gif preset when exporting, and only changed the size. Here’s the same clip done with Premiere + Media Encoder, bypassing Photoshop entirely. ![]() No effects or lighting etc, just resized to 540 width and exported with Selective Color & Diffusion chosen for export settings. ![]() I figured out how to make gifs with Adobe Premiere and the results, surprisingly, do not suck ass.
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