![]() ![]() I always hated it, so I either manually reduce my images to 256 colors when I'm making them, or opt for PNG or JPG. trying to make a shade of blue-green by putting a green pixel next to a blue one. ![]() The weird pixelated effect you get in GIFs is called "dithering" and it's when a program tries to fill in intermediate colors. But you can cut and paste pieces around a gif image all day, and save again and again (as long as you're not adding/changing colors), and it doesn't lose more quality (unlike JPEGs) It's the color loss/limit that makes them so ugly, but for black and white (or grey) 256 shades of grey is plenty. The reason they don't look like the original image though is that they're limited to 256 colors. you should really point out that GIFs are technically lossless. I would make a couple of technical notes about your guide though, so please don't take offense. Good to have a reference for examples specific to comic use. ![]()
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