The Art of the Animated GIF
theodp writes "Some artists work in oils, some in pastels, some in acrylics. Photographer Jamie Beck and motion graphics artist Kevin Burg? Their medium of choice is animated GIFs. 'We wanted to tell more of a story than a single still frame photograph but didn't want the high maintenance aspect of a video,' said the two of their unusual collaboration. Needless to say, these are not your father's GeoCities 'Under Construction' GIFs — it can take several hours of manual editing for Beck and Burg to breathe the whisper of life into each image."
http://www.effectgames.com/demos/canvascycle/
The images aren't loading on the page, so here is the original blog with more images: right here. And I would also say one of the nicest looking web page designs I've ever seen.
"First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
We need to start utilizing APNG or MNG. Firefox does support APNG, most Webkit browsers do not sadly. APNG has the advantage of displaying the first frame in any PNG capable program. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/APNG http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MNG
I think it's more that Gawker uses a moronic JavaScript method of making pages, with no non-JavaScript fallback. I use NoScript, therefore, I'm not going to see the article. That's fine, as I'm sure that someone else will post all the interesting bits in the discussion thread.
I really wanted to see those animated gifs that take ages to make though. They must be awesome. But not enough to potentially open up my browser to an attack. If Gawker are too incompetent to make a non-JavaScript fallback,I don't thin they'd be able to protect themselves against someone taking over their site and inserting malicious JavaScript in it...
(Also, MNG and APNG, neither of which has any real support. Have the GIF patents expired yet?)
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These are some of the best animated gifs I've ever seen.
The CB App. What's your 20?
I've always liked these wiggling 3D animated gifs.
Apparently I'm not the only one who dislikes the design. from here:
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Skip Gawker. Go to their website directly:
http://fromme-toyou.tumblr.com/tagged/cinemagraph
And yes, they are truly beautiful animations.
// file: mice.h
#include "frickin_lasers.h"
lossless + animation = movie-like images
Someday we'll hit the human carrying capacity. And the band will just play on.
Despite what many people believe, GIFs aren't limited to 256 colors. Although you would have realized that if you'd actually read the story. It may be another 10 years before animated PNGs are universally supported.
"First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
zzz...1997...
What does the age of the technique have to do with anything? Hell, wheels were invented and used thousands of years ago and they're still in use even today.
zzz...256 colors...zzzzzzz....
Limitations in color representation again doesn't really say anything negative. Those GIFs look just great, and it tells about the skills of those who created them that you cannot spot any definite miscolourings in any of those images.
Please. Wake me up when we've invented animated PNGs.
https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/APNG
That page you sent people to is a good example why. the 32k GIF renders extremely slowly on both FF4 and IE9. It goes one block at a time. Also, when I looked at the properties of it in FF, it only showed the first block, and then proceeded to do so on the page, even after a reload. Not the kind of thing you want on your webpage.
Also there's the fact that precious little saves them. The reason is that the GIF format does actually NOT support more than 8-bits per pixel. What they are doing to make those high colour GIFs is messing with animation. You make a non-looping animation that doesn't render the whole image area, but rather tiles. Fine but:
1) It is a rather hacked way of doing things.
2) It is slow in most browsers (as I pointed out).
3) It defeats any hope of having an animated GIF since it is using animation.
For all practical purposes, GIFs are limited to 256 colours. In the case of animations you get 256 per frame, and the frames don't have to be the same though some programs may not support that correctly.
Actually, you just mentioned one of the key problems with Web 2.0: "Why bother to link the site of an unknown artist who might be able to use the traffic, when you can link an intermediary aggregator first?"
My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine