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Export As / Save For Web size limit conundrum. How did I export an animated GIF at 1200 × 12404px??

New Here ,
Oct 14, 2024 Oct 14, 2024

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I have managed to export an animated GIF from Photoshop at 1200 × 12404px and can't replicate it.

 

I create eDMs for different brands almost daily. These eDMs often contain animated GIFs, and at least a handful of times a month, their height exceeds the seemingly arbitrary Photoshop limit of 8192px.

Yesterday, I created an eDM with two animated sections, exported it as an unsliced GIF and a JPG without thinking about the height, and sent off the previews to the client for review. 

 

This morning, the client came back happy and asked for the slices, so I went about my usual process of slicing and exporting. I checked the height and realised it was 12404px, and I'd need to split the file to export at the full width. For some reason, I also checked the height of the preview files and realised I've somehow managed to export them at the original size of 1200 × 12404px. How did I do it?? I must have used the Save for Web export because I don't know of another way of exporting animated GIFs, but why didn't it get resized to the 8192px limit yesterday, but it did today? 

I'd love to hear your ideas on this because I'd love to be able to replicate it. 

--- Kate
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Adobe
Community Expert ,
Oct 14, 2024 Oct 14, 2024

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Save for Web (Legacy) uses ancient code with an 8192px limit.

 

Later versions of Photoshop can use Save As to create an animated GIF, if the base file has timeline/frame information. I haven't tested, but this probably has a larger pixel size limit which should allow 12,404px..

 

Otherwise, you would need to export out each layer/frame as a separate file and use 3rd party software to create the animated GIF.

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New Here ,
Oct 29, 2024 Oct 29, 2024

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Thanks for the reply. Unfortunately, I don't think that's it. I've tried every export/save type I can think of, but I can't recreate it. I previously saw someone saying there is a glitch in Photoshop, and you can 'trick' it into ignoring the limit, but sadly I can't find the post I read that in either, so I can't put it to the test. I've been all too aware of this limit in Photoshop for a long time, so if I hadn't seen it myself, I wouldn't have believed it. 

--- Kate

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