![]() ![]() Now add your coloring/PSDs (I never use PSDs, I prefer to make my own adjustments. I like to use the Ratio because it makes the dimensions of the gif proportional. I am used to keep the height at the value of 4. Set the width and the height as you like for your gif - my most used ratios are 6/4, 7/4, 8/4 (which is 2/1), 9/4, 10/4. Select “Fixed Ratio”, and choose your own ratio. I don’t know why, but the Crop tool isn’t handy for me. But I prefer to use the “Rectangular marquee tool”. I am doing it differently from everyone I think, because most select the Crop tool. If you captured every frame, then use 0,06 or 0,07. I usually use either 0,1 or 0,11 seconds. Now, “Select all Frames” by again pressing on these 3 lines. Open the same window once more and click “Reverse Frames” It can take up to a couple of minutes, if you have a lot of frames. Now wait till the frames are all loaded into the Photoshop document. Go to Files, Scripts, Load Files into Stack.īrowse your files, select your frames, press ok to load them in this window, and click ok again. Once it is done, close your video file and open Photoshop (I am using Photoshop CC 2015, but the steps are almost identical in every version). “Storage” is where you want to save the frames in your computer, and “Filename” is, well, the name the captures will be saved as (for me in this example, it would be “CoS car 1” “CoS car 2” and so on). I save the files in PNG format because it preserves the quality better (PNG is a loseless format), but the majority of gifmakers use JPG. Personally I don’t see a big difference between “every frame” and “every 2 frames” in the final gif “every frame” appears to be slightly more fluid, but the other option looks very good as well. Some Gif Makers capture every frame, but that means the scene you want to gif will be half shorter. These are my settings for capturing frames. Right click and follow these directions, or simply press Ctrl+G (if I recall well in KMPlayer it is the same command). Find the scene you wish to gif, press pause. The commands on PotPlayer are very similar to KMPlayer, it is very easy to get used to it. I found PotPlayer, and I am very happy with it! It opens files other players are unable to, and it never had any bugs. NGU standard is recommended for lower quality sources.Gif tutorial (very detailed) using PotPlayerĪ couple of months ago, I had to look for an alternative to the KMPlayer because it couldn’t open a certain type of files (also because the last KMPlayer update was really bad). NGU sharp is recommended if you use mostly high quality sources. So we want to leverage our GPU for image upscaling.įor image upscaling, we want to be using NGU (next generation upscaling) which is madVR's AI upscaler. ![]() Chroma upscaling is not as important as image upscaling for picture quality. >Under scaling algorithms: For image downscaling, I prefer to leave it at DXVA2 which overrides madVR. It does make some difference, but make sure you choose the lowest strength settings else you'll lose fine details. If you have more gpu power to spend after adjusting scaling algorithms to your liking, you can use more artifact removal. The 2nd sub-box can be checked if we are to use NGU sharp (discussed below). So for similar or lower cards, I recommend either leaving them alone too or only checking reduce compression artifact, with low quality and strength at 1 or 2. For artifact removal, with RIS and fluid-motion on, my rx570 with a 1080p monitor runs way hotter and louder than I'd like. >Under processing: Leave deinterlacing, image enhancements, zoom control untouched. Refer to the linked guide for any issues. ![]() The HDR tab will also be dependent on the monitor you have. Double click on the display and set the properties and calibration according to the monitor you have. >Under devices: select your display and choose the appropriate device type. It should start minimized in the system tray. Open madHcCtrl from the installation folder. ![]() This guide contains all the info on all the madVR settings #You can also use external LAV filters without any issues. Select DXVA2 (copy-back) as the h/w decoder in Options>Internal filters>Video decoder and your gpu as your h/w device. #Select madVR in Options>Output>Direct Show Video. Download and install madVR and MPC-HC or MPC-BE or Potplayer And for those who haven't used madVR, I'll also try to address the performance issues the best I can. Also, RIS will still help out native 1080p, 4k sources. It's not gonna be as good as the real deal, but it should offer a noticeable improvement. It should work well for upscaling 720p files to 1080p displays and 1080p files to QHD/4k displays. I couldn't find a beginner-friendly guide on the matter, and thought I'd give it a try. ![]()
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