Wednesday, January 04, 2012

How to convert any video file to an animated GIF

How to convert any video file to an animated GIF:

Convert video to GIF
Have you ever wanted to convert a clip from a video file into a GIF image?, say for use as an animated Avatar image or for publishing on a website, etc. This post will present a relatively quick and easy method to convert any video file to GIF at the press of a button, without having to export your video into individual image frames first and without a lot of mucking around. If you just want to convert a segment (or segments) or a larger video file, this article will begin by describing how to do that as well. Lastly, we will use all freeware software installed locally, without using any web apps.




To begin with, we are assuming that you have a video file that you would like to convert to an animated GIF image.


Freeware tools used (Windows only):



Before you start: since most GIFs are short snippets and not what you would consider full-fledged videos, we assume that you need to clip a short segment (or segments) of your video first that you want to convert to GIF. If your video is already clipped and you want to convert it to GIF in it’s entirety, skip to STEP 6; otherwise start with Step 1.


Note on clipping: GIFs are by nature should be small and compact, in order to be easily distributable and light when used in websites and the like. Therefore, CLIP YOUR VIDEO into a little snippet before converting it to GIF. If you don’t, you will end up with a very large and somewhat useless GIF (that is much larger than the source video). We have successfully converted a 5 minute 49 meg music video to a 144 meg GIF that played fine in Internet Explorer, as well as a 20 minute 175 meg video into 1.11 GIG GIF (that incidentally no browser or GIF player would play). What I am trying to say here is: make your GIFs as small as possible; clip your source video first.




Step 1: We will use Windows Live Movie Maker, a free video editor from Microsoft, to clip the segments you want from the larger video. Download it from this page. Note that the installer downloaded might include other Windows Live components; make sure to select Movie Maker and not anything else (unless you want them, of course). Install and run




Step 2: add your video into Windows Live Movie Maker (click on the ‘Add Videos and Photos’ button in the ribbon).


Windows Live Movie Maker open video




Step 3: in the ‘Edit’ tab. Next, decide on how many segments of the video you want, then move the slider beneath the video and use the ‘Split’ tool in the ribbon to cut the video into however many initial segments that you want (you will later refine these segments using the ‘set start point’ and ‘set end point tools’).


In the screenshot below I cut the original video into three segments. Each segment appears as a thumbnail in the right sidebar.


Windows Live Movie Maker 3 part split




Step 4: use the slider at bottom to isolate the segments you want within each part you created, and the ‘set start point’ and ‘set end point’ tools to hone in on the segments you want within each. Note that the slider under the video will move across all parts when you move it, so keep your eye on the thumbnails on the right to see where you are.


Windows Live Movie Maker start and end points


Note: this will create a single video with all the parts you isolated strung together. If you want to cut out different clips and convert to separate GIFs then that is even easier; just do each segment separately.




Step 5: lastly, save your movie.


From the ‘File’ Menu, go down to ‘Save Movie’ and then all the way up to ‘Recommended Setting, and save it under any name. Output format will be WMV; that’s perfectly fine.


export movie windows live movie maker




Step 6: download and install iWisoft Free Video Converter, then run it.


Note: the choice of this program is because it supports GIF creation across lot of options and up to a maximum resolution of 704×576. Format Factory also creates GIFs, but with a max resolution that is a lot smaller (which actually might not matter much because the higher the resolution the bigger the file size, and you want to keep GIFs small in general).




Step 7: load your WMV from step 5 (you can drag and drop it onto the interface) then select “Picture – GIF Animation Formats” from the profile dropdown menu.


Note: you get this profile via “Flash Video And Picture” then “Picture / GIF etc”. See the screenshot below.


iWisoft Sreenshot select GIF profile


Next, click the ‘settings’ button (next to the profile). In the screen that follows, choose the output resolution you want as well as the bitrate. A higher bitrate = smoother animation, but also a greater file size. Finally, click the big ‘Start’ button in the lower right to start the conversion process.


iWisoft Sreenshot settings


A note on bitrates: my suggestion, try a bitrate of 10 or 12 and see what file size you get, if it is too high you might think of redoing it using a smaller bitrate, if it is small enough you might redo using a higher bit rate.




That’s it, you’re done. See the GIF we created from this YouTube video below.


My Movie mpg_3


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