>>928689Well, I was mostly just joking 'cause I don't think mr. requester is too smart (notice the cute way he tried to pass it off as just an "idea" and then resorted to literally begging when he realized no one cared?).
But if you actually do want to make brainlet gifs of any variety, here's a template for it, and a guide to making your own template out of anything you want.
>1. Find a suitable drawing. MSPaint stuff is great for this, but really, anything with solid colors and contrasting lines (and some space to put your gif in, I admit brainlet is limited in this quality) should be fine.>2. Select the space you want your GIF to occupy. Fuzzy Select and Select by Color are your friends.>3. Make sure the selection includes at least the edges of the linework, if not the entirety of the lines. You can do this using Select>Grow. This will ensure no fuzzy edges in the next step.>4. Use Colors>Color to Alpha to remove all the white from the selection. This filter is practically magic, and will turn the white within every pixel of the selection transparent. So, fully white pixels are completely erased, but the anti-aliasing around the lines (where it fades from black to white) will be erased based on the level of white that each pixel has, leaving behind only pure black fading into transparency. This option also has a Transparency Threshold and an Opacity Threshold to finetune the results. Transparency will erase more pixels when increased, and you'll tend to want to bump it up just a bit to knock out any JPG artifacts (which otherwise will be left behind because they aren't fully white). Opacity will leave behind more pixels when decreased, and while it's usually fine at the default level, you can decrease it a bit if you notice holes in your lines. To make it easier to see whether your thresholds are right, you can put a layer of a really contrasting color like dark green or neon pink behind the drawing.>5. Enjoy, and let me know if you have any questions.