savge17 0 Report post Posted May 1, 2006 I always get horrible quality with my gifs on my animated signatures and things like this. Does anyone have any links to anything that will help increase the quality of my animated sigs? Or does anyone know witch settings to use? Thanks. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
truefusion 3 Report post Posted May 1, 2006 You may never receive as good of a quality with GIFs as you will with JPGs, or the good-quality PNGs. Though, i hear that there is an animated PNG. But, unfortunately, not many programs support it. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
leeleelee 0 Report post Posted May 1, 2006 Which software do you use to create you gifs. I use Photoshop and export to Image ready which does a good job Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
FLaKes 0 Report post Posted May 2, 2006 The animated png was called Ming but it was never released, no one supported it. =( I bet it wouldve been really cool, but not to worry, svg is on its way and it looks like its going to be really cool. Check some examples here: http://forums.xisto.com/no_longer_exists/ Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Inspiron 0 Report post Posted May 2, 2006 The animated png was called Ming but it was never released, no one supported it. =( I bet it wouldve been really cool, but not to worry, svg is on its way and it looks like its going to be really cool. Check some examples here: http://forums.xisto.com/no_longer_exists/ SVG format seems cool. According to the samples you've provided, I can see that it takes some time to process the vectors before displaying it. I'm surprise with this format because it isn't really an image file. Rather, it's just an image information file to tell the browser, or the image viewer, to render the image according to the information file. I'm somewhat surprise to see that is can be viewed as text. Also, I've tried zoom in and it doesn't get pixilated. I guess this technology of imaging will be the future. However, it will take alot of processing time to render those images on the spot. A webpage with full of svg graphics might be terrible. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
kylelnsn 0 Report post Posted May 10, 2006 i have the same problem you make an animation and then when you save it as a gif it optomizes it and then the quality is lost, i use paintshop pros animation shop, and i have fiddled with the settting like mad and it does not make much diffrence.thanks guys Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Zabb 0 Report post Posted May 10, 2006 you need to change your optimize settings. and to test it before saving there is a optimized tab that will show you exactly what the saved product will look like.I'll make a quick tut on it now. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
garbage 0 Report post Posted May 17, 2006 yuup unfortunately that is the drawback to gifs unless you have flash software. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Adobemedia 0 Report post Posted August 13, 2006 |yuup unfortunately that is the drawback to gifs unless you have flash software.|And flash files are 2-3mb in size, and most forums don't allow them. NEVER use flash for sigs. For an example of how flash is supposed to be used, check out (with a DSL,Cable, or BrodBand modem.) http://www.2advanced.com/ Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
robcozzens 0 Report post Posted September 18, 2007 Animated gifs are not very good if you have a lot of subtle color. They work really good for images with flat colors like cartoons. The software you are using probably has options for how many colors to compress to (and whether to dither or not). Try increasing the colors (you should be able to go up to 256).You should be able to change the playback speed as well. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites