![]() But remember, by lowering your frame rate you are dropping frames and therefore losing smoothness. The lower your frame rate, the faster it will capture the video. Here you can change the frames per second (fps) that PicGIF Lite will capture. Once you’ve dropped your video in, the app will ask you Load it. We do not condone ripping content off YouTube but plenty of plugins do. PicGIF is super WYSIWYG, meaning “what you see is what you get.” Once you’ve downloaded and booted it up, add video or a group of photos. Download it for free at the Mac App store. A screencast GIF created with PicGIF Lite. ![]() Some examples of GIFs being used in journalism here. Then we’ll make a GIF from a series of photos. We’ll use the free application PicGIF Lite. We’ll start with making a GIF from a video. This tutorial will show you how to make a GIF from a series or images, a video, or a screencast. For more on journalist’s adopting GIFs, read through Lena Groeger’s piece “ How to use loops to explain anything,” which appeared on Source and ProPublica’s Nerd Blog. Increasingly, GIFs are being used by journalists to illustrate concepts, make visuals more dynamic, and walk viewers through a process. (In recent news, GIF clearing house Giphy recently released a camera app to record from your phone.) Credit: Comedy Central. They’re more lightweight than video, take very little time to produce, and, if a picture is worth 1,000 words, then GIFs are arguably worth a whole lot more. ![]()
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