Thank you for your wonderful lesson Angelo🙃 Instructions were very clear and straight to the point. Finally I have made my 1st animation card. Have a great day
Hey all! I have had a few requests of getting this into an email or social post as an animated GIF! Here is my work-around for getting an animation from InDesign to mp4 or GIF: • Use a screen recording program (QuickTime on a Mac works well!) and select the area of the card you want to record. • Press Record and then play the animation a few times in the web browser. • Save the video to your desktop. • Go to Adobe Spark's free Video-to-GIF converter ( www.adobe.com/express/feature/video/video-to-gif ) and choose "Upload Video". • Once video is uploaded, use the timeline to trim the area you want and then choose the File Size. • Click Download and share via Email or Social Media Post.
Hello! I followed your tutorial, it's super cool! However when I publish my design with the animations, it's very blurry and you can see the pixels. Basically I created my design in Illustrator and copied it in in design so the quality is unchanged. Would you happen to have a clue why it's doing that? Thanks you!!!
Hey! When you publish online, click the Advanced tab in the export window. Here, you can increase the resolution to the highest setting. That should make a difference.
Great tutorial. Subscribed! Is it possible to embed the card into an email and have the animations work, rather than having the recipient click the link?
Hello Angelo, I thoroughly enjoy watching your videos and great content. It's inspiring and get's my creative mind going with how I can apply this to the everyday creative world. But I'm stuck. For example I create an animated file but the only way the world can see it is if I publish it to my creative cloud account, but the work is for my paying client. So would I expect a client working say in the finance sector to have to pay for creative cloud and then use my Indesign file which I send to him to publish my file so he then has the link to send on to say 3000 clients? Do these published files take up a lot of cloud storage etc? Sorry for the questions I am chomping at the bit to apply your skills to some projects but I can't afford to go into a cul-de-sac and expect my clients to get involved in the process as they pay me to deal with the project. Many thanks - great channel as always :)
Hi Johnathan! You should always get details in client brief of what the goal of the project will be. Any digital publishing projects are typically delivered for e-reader or web use. If it's the latter, you may need a dev to help you take your indesign project from export (File > Export > HTML) to web. Or you can use third-party application in5, which has more features for the designer to publish right to web without coding. Finally, there's always the option of using Adobe's Publish Online tool and then embedding the work on the client's website backend. Just remember that work only lives on the Adobe site as long as you have a CC subscription. So that could cause issues too. Take care.
Thank you Angelo, I am always learning new things with your videos. Keep going!
Excellent and inspiring!
Thanks Miranda!
Amazing!!! Thank you for the tutorial
Very welcome!
انت عبقري اشكرك شكرا عظيما
You are a genius, thank you very much
Realy cool! Thank you
Thankyou sir ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
Very welcome. All the best.
Thank you for your wonderful lesson Angelo🙃 Instructions were very clear and straight to the point. Finally I have made my 1st animation card. Have a great day
That's awesome Lillian! I am glad it helped you!
Just came across this tutorial! Thank you! I didn't see the color swatches in the download materials. Did I miss something?
Hey all! I have had a few requests of getting this into an email or social post as an animated GIF!
Here is my work-around for getting an animation from InDesign to mp4 or GIF:
• Use a screen recording program (QuickTime on a Mac works well!) and select the area of the card you want to record.
• Press Record and then play the animation a few times in the web browser.
• Save the video to your desktop.
• Go to Adobe Spark's free Video-to-GIF converter ( www.adobe.com/express/feature/video/video-to-gif ) and choose "Upload Video".
• Once video is uploaded, use the timeline to trim the area you want and then choose the File Size.
• Click Download and share via Email or Social Media Post.
Hello! I followed your tutorial, it's super cool! However when I publish my design with the animations, it's very blurry and you can see the pixels. Basically I created my design in Illustrator and copied it in in design so the quality is unchanged. Would you happen to have a clue why it's doing that? Thanks you!!!
Hey! When you publish online, click the Advanced tab in the export window. Here, you can increase the resolution to the highest setting. That should make a difference.
Great tutorial. Subscribed! Is it possible to embed the card into an email and have the animations work, rather than having the recipient click the link?
Check the pinned comment! Thanks Nick.
Hello Angelo, I thoroughly enjoy watching your videos and great content. It's inspiring and get's my creative mind going with how I can apply this to the everyday creative world. But I'm stuck. For example I create an animated file but the only way the world can see it is if I publish it to my creative cloud account, but the work is for my paying client. So would I expect a client working say in the finance sector to have to pay for creative cloud and then use my Indesign file which I send to him to publish my file so he then has the link to send on to say 3000 clients? Do these published files take up a lot of cloud storage etc? Sorry for the questions I am chomping at the bit to apply your skills to some projects but I can't afford to go into a cul-de-sac and expect my clients to get involved in the process as they pay me to deal with the project. Many thanks - great channel as always :)
Hi Johnathan! You should always get details in client brief of what the goal of the project will be. Any digital publishing projects are typically delivered for e-reader or web use. If it's the latter, you may need a dev to help you take your indesign project from export (File > Export > HTML) to web. Or you can use third-party application in5, which has more features for the designer to publish right to web without coding. Finally, there's always the option of using Adobe's Publish Online tool and then embedding the work on the client's website backend. Just remember that work only lives on the Adobe site as long as you have a CC subscription. So that could cause issues too. Take care.
How can i export it for my website ?
Hey Mohamed. Check the pinned comment that answers your question. Thanks!