To start screen capping the scene hit start and press stop when the scene has ended. I always minimise the screen and drag the Consecutive Image Capturer box alongside the video so I can see what I’m giffing. Note: You can choose where you’d like to save your screen caps by clicking on the square with three dots which is been circled red (above). You can use the same or adjust them to suit you best. Go to the scene you want to gif, pause just before it and hit CTRL + G, which will bring up the Consecutive Image Capturer (below). Top tip: To ensure your gifs are of the highest quality always aim to use videos that are 1080p or at least 720p (HD). I’m giffing from a downloaded episode of Game of Thrones so I go to Open File(s) > Videos and open the correct file. Open Potplayer (or whatever program you’re using) and open the video source you’re going to be giffing from. You can download both programs for free along with others such as VLC and others, so it’s all about finding one that works best for the laptop/computer you’re using. Note: A lot of gif makers use KM Player to screen cap, but I found that it constantly crashed on my laptop and wasn’t very functional so I switched to Potplayer which suits me much better. I do this using Potplayer, which you can download for free here. The first step to making gifs is taking screen caps of what you want to gif. ![]() ![]() This tutorial will be divided into two parts - Part 1: Making the gif and Part 2: Colouring the gif. You can find my gif making tutorial for beginners here and colouring tutorial for beginners here. Note: This tutorial won’t be as in-depth as my previous tutorials since this is geared more towards people that have basic understanding of how to gif and use Photoshop. You can find all of my previous tutorials here. ![]() This is an updated tutorial on how I make and colour my gifs.
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