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anhl26850133
Participant
June 14, 2017
Answered

how do i export a GIF with a small file size ?

  • June 14, 2017
  • 2 replies
  • 48058 views

hello everyone,

I am currently working on a small GIF with Adobe premiere CC but i can't seem to find a good ratio quality / size. Right now, my gif weighs 2.35Mo and i fear this is too much. The settings I found are the following (for the sequence) :

frame / sec = 15

sampling rate = 32 000HZ

image size = 665 x 90px

in the export window :

quality = 29

I must be missing something to do it right, but what is it ?
Any help would be appreciated

Thanks a lot.

PS : i'm not a native english speaker, so please forgive me if there is any mistake ^^

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer eikonoklastes

I now see that you can choose an Animated GIF from Premiere, which has a single Quality slider. You might still want to consider Photoshop as it gives you far better control over the output of the GIF, like restricting the colour palette, which might help reduce your output file size.

2 replies

eikonoklastesCorrect answer
Legend
June 14, 2017

I now see that you can choose an Animated GIF from Premiere, which has a single Quality slider. You might still want to consider Photoshop as it gives you far better control over the output of the GIF, like restricting the colour palette, which might help reduce your output file size.

anhl26850133
Participant
June 22, 2017

Yes thank you, but with Photoshop it doesn't seem possible (to me, at last) to create smooth transitions and nice effects... Or maybe there is a way to create them with Première, export them in a video format (mpeg 4 for example), open it with Photoshop and convert it in a GIF (with less colors etc) ?

Legend
June 22, 2017

Yes, that's what I meant. Import your video into Photoshop and export a GIF from there.

Legend
June 14, 2017

Premiere doesn't output animated GIFs as far as I know. It will just output a sequence of single-frame GIF images.  I could be wrong here.

You can use Photoshop for a self-contained GIF animation.

Regarding file size, GIFs are not well-suited for video and there is no way to match the size of an H.264 (or H.265) MP4 and retain image quality. Unless you absolutely must have a GIF, you should use an MP4 instead - much better quality, lower file size, and smoother video.

anhl26850133
Participant
June 14, 2017

Hello,

Thank you for your answser but i don't understand the difference between "sequence of single-frame GIF images" and a "self-contained GIF animation". I have the possibility to export an animated GIF directly from Premiere .. ?

I know that GIFS are really not what's best regarding export quality, but this was for a small ad banner, so i had no choice there ^^