How to Make a Cinemagraph in Photoshop

A cinemagraph is, in short, a GIF where most of the frame is frozen and one small part keeps looping — water flowing, a curtain swaying, hair drifting while everything else stands still. From a distance it looks like a photo; the tiny motion only catches your eye on a second look.

This guide walks through making a cinemagraph in Photoshop from a short video clip. Video walkthrough first, written recap underneath.

Video Walkthrough

Step by Step

  1. Shoot a short clip (3-6 seconds). Put the camera on a tripod or solid surface — even a slight wobble ruins the effect.
  2. In Photoshop: File > Import > Video Frames to Layers. Use Limit To Every to thin out frames if needed.
  3. Open Window > Timeline, switch to Create Frame Animation and build frames from the layers.
  4. Pick the frame that should stay frozen, duplicate it, and place it as the top layer above the entire stack.
  5. Add a Layer Mask to that top still layer. Invert the mask to black, then paint white with a soft brush over the area you want to keep moving. The video animation underneath will only show through there.
  6. In the Timeline, make sure the loop starts cleanly — drop a few frames around the seam if the cut is visible.
  7. Export with File > Export > Save for Web (Legacy) > GIF, set Looping Options to Forever. Trim colors and dimensions for a sensible file size.

Tips For a Polished Result

  • Keep the moving area small — one isolated motion reads stronger than the whole scene shifting.
  • Stabilise the camera; if needed, use Edit > Auto-Align Layers.
  • Limit the loop to 2-3 seconds to keep the GIF light.
  • For social, also export as MP4 — cleaner and far smaller.

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