![]() ![]() Any tools that can play an animation on your screen and capture it as a video may work. But these specific tools aren't required. The tools I use in this video are PowerPoint for Mac 2011 and Camtasia for screencasting. This process is easy to follow in the video below. Edit the video to remove unwanted sections.Stop the recording in your screencasting tool (this will bring up the tool's timeline).Click "Record" on your screencasting tool.Open PowerPoint with your animation visible.No matter what tool you choose, the process is similar. I've used Camtasia and Screenflow and consider them almost interchangeable. I will be using Camtasia for Mac to record my screen in rest of this guide.īottom Line: To make ExplainerGIFs, you need some way to capture an animation on your screen and potentially edit the footage to make it look great. ![]() The products listed above offer a free trial and I encourage you to experiment. PAID examples include: ( I am not affiliated with any products listed here.) Export directly to services like YouTube.Export video files in a variety of format and sizes.Add highlights and annotations after recording is finished.The best-in-class options are screencasting tools AND full video editors. The paid tools, on the other hand, come with many more features and options. You may end up with a GIF that includes unwanted content. It makes an animated GIF from everything it records and doesn't provide a way to edit the clip after it is captured. This can make the ExplainerGIF process very quick. Instead, it creates an animated GIF from what it records via the transparent window that appears on your screen. Unlike the tools listed above, LICEcap doesn't record video. LICEcap is a free screencasting tool that deserves a bit of special attention. QuickTime Screen Recording (built-in Mac).Branding watermarks present in the video.Limited ability to export the video in desired formats.However, many free tools have serious limitations. The free tools can almost always accomplish the core feature of capturing the screencast video. As with any software, you often get what you pay for. There are a number of free screencasting tools available on the Internet and many computers come with screencasting tools built in (more on that below). Before going to the tools, there are a few things you may consider: Free vs. In the sections below, you'll see that I recommend a few options based on my research. There is a large variety of screencasting tools, both free and paid. You can see why this is kind of tool is so central to creating Explainer GIFs: screencasting allows us to quickly make a video from anything that happens on our screen. Screencasting is a fundamental part of creating ExplainerGIFs. If you are new to screencasting, the short Common Craft video below will give you important context on what screencasting is and how it is used. If this is your best option, create a video and go to the next section to convert your video to an animated GIF. Use (File -> Export to -> Quicktime) to create the video. Keynote creates videos with ease and good quality.The quality is poor and in my experience, it doesn't work well with animations. While PowerPoint can technically create a video from a presentation (File -> Save As Movie) I don't recommend it.This may be an option if you don't have screencasting tools. Please note: It is possible to use PowerPoint or Keynote to save a presentation as a video file. When editing is finished, we'll create an animated GIF, or ExplainerGIF.Once recorded, the animation can be edited and manipulated.When the animation plays, we'll record what is on the computer screen using screencasting tools.We'll use Powerpoint to "play" the animation on the screen.There are a number of ways to do this, but they all have a few things in common: Now that we've created a simple animation in PowerPoint, we need to capture that animation and turn it into an animated GIF.
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