>>10496856>it was a GIF...GIFs can only be played back at frame rates that can be represented as whole hundredths of a second, with a max of 2/100th second (50 FPS).
>36 frame GIF, 1.535s MP3.
>Frame time of 40 ms / 25 FPS in the GIF
>Needed 42.638 ms to sync with the audio length, which is not possible.
You can get 40 or 50 ms (25 or 20 FPS) - no in betweens possible without doing things like blending, duplicating, or dropping frames - at which point you have to ask yourself if it's even worth it.
Whichever tool made it rounded for 4/100s. I'd try to give you advice but I'm not even sure how you arrived at either output file.
If you want to keep doing whatever it is you're doing...use 25/50 FPS "PAL" project files in Premiere. I think they're the only two typical "video" frame rates that can be represented accurately in hundredths of a second.
Enable frame blending, right click on your video in the timeline and choose whichever frame blending option you think looks best. Or just use WEBM FFS.If none of this concerns any of the rest of (You), don't read it. Knowledge is useless if you don't share it, trivial or esoteric
or autistic as it may be. I unticked the little "You" box, so your replies will go right into the void.