![]() ![]() I’m not sure it would be possible given the number of variables involved, but a few presets that could be applied with one click of a button would be nice because some of the settings can be a little confusing for the uninitiated. GIF Brewery 3 also preserves the prior version’s fine-grained control over images and text that can be overlaid on your clip, and adds even more filters that can be applied to each frame. I did run across one bug when adding a long, centered text overlay. ![]() If I went back to edit the text with something shorter, the text would no longer be centered, instead appearing at the far left edge of the GIF. I use GIF Brewery most often in two scenarios. First, I use it to save GIFs my friends post on Twitter for my own use. Twitter converts GIFs into MP4 video files. By right-clicking on a clip, I can save it to my Downloads folder, import it into GIF Brewery, and quickly reconvert it to a GIF for my own use. Second, I create occasional screen recordings for articles like this one, which is far easier with GIF Brewery now than when Federico was using GIF Brewery 2.3 with Reflector. GIF Brewery also works well with longer files like movies to create GIFs like the one at the top of this article. If you want or need to go beyond the GIFs created by others, I recommend trying GIF Brewery 3. Despite a few rough edges, GIF Brewery’s new features and rendering engine improvements make it my favorite GIF utility. GIF Brewery 3 is available on the Mac App Store and is free until March 12, 2016. ![]()
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