About the Video to GIF Converter
The Video to GIF tool converts any video file your browser can play into a sharable animated GIF. You pick the start and end of the clip, choose a frame rate, set a maximum width, and the tool produces a real GIF you can download and post anywhere images are accepted.
Most online GIF makers run your video through their servers, which is slow on big files and a privacy risk on anything personal. This tool runs entirely in your browser. The video never leaves your device, the conversion happens in a Web Worker so the page stays responsive, and the GIF appears as soon as encoding finishes.
What you can control
- Trim range. Drag the start and end handles, or scrub the video and use "Set start to playhead" and "Set end to playhead" for frame-accurate placement.
- Frame rate. Anywhere from 5 to 30 fps. Higher rates look smoother but make larger files. 10 to 15 fps is the sweet spot for most clips.
- Max width. The tool downscales the video while preserving aspect ratio. 320 to 480 pixels covers most social and chat use cases without bloating the file.
- Quality and dither. Quality balances color fidelity against file size. Floyd-Steinberg or Atkinson dithering helps gradients look less banded at the cost of some sharpness.
- Loop. Loop forever or stop on the last frame.
- Text overlay. Add a caption to the GIF and style it your way. Pick a font, size, color, position (top, middle, or bottom), and toggle a black outline for legibility on busy backgrounds. The text is baked into the GIF so it shows up everywhere it gets shared.
Common uses
- Make a quick reaction GIF from a movie clip or a recorded screen capture.
- Embed a short demo of a product or feature in a README, blog post, or chat message.
- Convert a phone-shot moment into a looping image for a slideshow, email signature, or message thread.
- Pull a short highlight out of a longer recording to share without making people watch the whole thing.
- Prototype an animation by trimming a video reference and dropping the GIF into a design file.
Tips for a smaller file
- Keep the clip under 5 seconds when possible. GIF file size grows quickly with duration.
- Lower the frame rate before you lower the resolution. The eye forgives 10 fps a lot more than it forgives a blurry image.
- Use "Smaller file" quality and turn dithering off for clips with flat colors and minimal motion.
- Crop visually busy backgrounds out before recording when you can. GIF compresses repeating colors much better than detail.
If the GIF you need ends up too large, consider sharing the original video instead. GIF was never optimized for long, high-fidelity content, and short loops are where it shines.
Common questions
How do I make a GIF from a video?
Load the video, trim to the exact moment, choose the frame rate and output size, and download the looping GIF. Thirty seconds from clip to group-chat ammunition.
Why is my GIF file so large?
GIF is an old format that stores every frame: size grows with dimensions, frame rate, and length. Keep clips short, dimensions modest, and frame rates around 10 to 15 for chat-friendly files; the controls make the trade visible.
What frame rate should a GIF use?
10 to 15 fps reads smoothly for most motion at a fraction of the size of 30. Try 12 as a default and adjust by eye.
Can I make GIFs from screen recordings?
Yes, and it is the documentation power move: record the interaction, convert the key moment to a GIF, and drop it into the README or bug report where video embeds cannot go.
Is my video uploaded during conversion?
No, the conversion runs in your browser, so the source clip stays on your device and processing starts instantly.
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