GIF animator 5 - grainy gif image

GIF Animator, SmartSaver Pro, Plugins, Applets....
userx
Posts: 2
Joined: Sat Aug 23, 2008 12:18 pm
Location: US

GIF animator 5 - grainy gif image

Post by userx »

The outputed gif file is not what I'd call even good quality. I do use the optimization with 256 photo. On the frame properties I select "best" for image quality yet still the gif file looks grainy (poor resolution). It's not my video card as other people's gif have a high resolution look to them when I see them on the web.
User avatar
VikingAnimations
Advisor
Posts: 942
Joined: Sat Nov 26, 2005 2:14 pm
operating_system: Windows 7 Home Premium
System_Drive: C
32bit or 64bit: 64 Bit
processor: AMD A4-6300 APU with Radeon HD Graphics 3-7 GHz
ram: 4 GB
Hard_Drive_Capacity: 1 TB
Corel programs: Ulead GIF Animator 5.05, MotionStudio 3D
Location: Winnipeg, Canada

Post by VikingAnimations »

Without seeing the image, it's hard to give a 100% correct answer. But if your animation has a large number and wide variation of colors, optimizing it down to 256 colors isn't going to give a very good result. The GIF format is old, with color support for, obviously, only 256 colors... The more varied the images in your animation are, the less attractive it'll look when crunched down to 256 colors.

One tweak you can try is to change the optimization method to "minimum variance." Optimize Tab
Image
You could also change from global palette to local palette for all frames.

If you could upload your image to the web (your own site, Photobucket, etc.) and post a link, we'd know for sure.
userx
Posts: 2
Joined: Sat Aug 23, 2008 12:18 pm
Location: US

Thanks

Post by userx »

Thanks for the info. Before I got your response I did play with "dither" and setting it at or near 100, help the image quality. I'm usually working with 5 - 7 seconds of video so I get about 200 frames.

I will also try setting the Minimum variance in the optimization method to see what effect that has.

Also, your link to your GIF animation basic guide has been very informative.
User avatar
VikingAnimations
Advisor
Posts: 942
Joined: Sat Nov 26, 2005 2:14 pm
operating_system: Windows 7 Home Premium
System_Drive: C
32bit or 64bit: 64 Bit
processor: AMD A4-6300 APU with Radeon HD Graphics 3-7 GHz
ram: 4 GB
Hard_Drive_Capacity: 1 TB
Corel programs: Ulead GIF Animator 5.05, MotionStudio 3D
Location: Winnipeg, Canada

Post by VikingAnimations »

Glad you found my tut useful!

Yup, 200 or so frames will likely strain the output quality... A high dither rate will help. Picking the best 256 colors from 200 images isn't going to give great results... a global palette keeps the file size down, but may sacrifice image quality, as you've noticed.

The GIF format is a bit dated - the gif89a format that supports animation dates back to 1989. There is an animated variant of the .png format, called .mng, but support for that hasn't really gone anywhere as of yet.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiple-i ... k_Graphics

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graphics_I ... nge_Format

The APNG (Animated Portable Network Graphics) format is another attempt at things, but it's not getting too far, either. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animated_P ... k_Graphics