I'm not sure what particular issue you're having, but I'll do my best to guide you through the steps. 1) When your Photoshop project is ready to be exported, on the menu bar click on File>Export>Save for Web (Legacy) or press Alt+Shift+Ctrl+S if you're on Windows. 2) Now, near the top-right of the window that just opened, click on the dropdown below the preset (it should say either JPEG, PNG, or GIF) and click on GIF. You may need to wait up to a few minutes, depending on your computer. 3) Near the bottom-right of the window, click on the Looping Options dropdown menu and select Forever. 4) Click save, and select where to save it to 5) Create your blogger post, and click on the image button on the toolbar (it's to the right of "Link") 6) Select Choose Files and upload your GIF, then click Add Selected 7) Publish your blog post
Thank you so much for your help!!! I was doing all of that correctly but didn't know what else to try since I wasn't sure what I misunderstood, so outlining those steps was GREATLY appreciated! My 'Preset' section said 'unnamed' and I had to change it to a 'dithered' GIF. Thanks again, you were a huge help!
I love this! I like that you were able to add a little more polish to expand upon what we did in class with the static effect. It's definitely giving me some The Ring movie vibes.
I really like the feeling this creates, considering the time of year and Halloween upcoming. I also really enjoy the static effect that you added on top. How did you do that? One thing I would consider is slowing down the transition time between images for a more dramatic effect, but other than that, great job!
I made the static effect by creating a black fill layer and applying some filters to it until looked like static. Then I duplicated it a few times and used a mask to remove a few horizontal strips from each copy of the layer. I then made each layer appear a few times here and there so that it looked like the static was changing.
I agree that the gif is too fast. I wanted to make it slower but making the static effect was a bit of a drag that I didn't want to deal with.
I'm having the worst time trying to upload mine, I've tried saving it different ways (html vs images) with no luck, any tips?
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure what particular issue you're having, but I'll do my best to guide you through the steps.
Delete1) When your Photoshop project is ready to be exported, on the menu bar click on
File>Export>Save for Web (Legacy) or press Alt+Shift+Ctrl+S if you're on Windows.
2) Now, near the top-right of the window that just opened, click on the dropdown below the preset (it should say either JPEG, PNG, or GIF) and click on GIF. You may need to wait up to a few minutes, depending on your computer.
3) Near the bottom-right of the window, click on the Looping Options dropdown menu and select Forever.
4) Click save, and select where to save it to
5) Create your blogger post, and click on the image button on the toolbar (it's to the right of "Link")
6) Select Choose Files and upload your GIF, then click Add Selected
7) Publish your blog post
Thank you so much for your help!!! I was doing all of that correctly but didn't know what else to try since I wasn't sure what I misunderstood, so outlining those steps was GREATLY appreciated! My 'Preset' section said 'unnamed' and I had to change it to a 'dithered' GIF. Thanks again, you were a huge help!
DeleteI love this! I like that you were able to add a little more polish to expand upon what we did in class with the static effect. It's definitely giving me some The Ring movie vibes.
ReplyDeleteI really like the feeling this creates, considering the time of year and Halloween upcoming. I also really enjoy the static effect that you added on top. How did you do that? One thing I would consider is slowing down the transition time between images for a more dramatic effect, but other than that, great job!
ReplyDeleteI made the static effect by creating a black fill layer and applying some filters to it until looked like static. Then I duplicated it a few times and used a mask to remove a few horizontal strips from each copy of the layer. I then made each layer appear a few times here and there so that it looked like the static was changing.
DeleteI agree that the gif is too fast. I wanted to make it slower but making the static effect was a bit of a drag that I didn't want to deal with.