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To change the sizing when you are done you can go to actions- add- copy canvas. Then go to a new file of the new size (ex going 500pxl to 112 pxl but as a new canvas) then do actions-add-paste. It will save you a lot of time. I also recommend exporting to a Google drive or air drop it to your Mac rather than emailing it. Could hurt the file ...
All the technical requirements are listed on twitch (dimensions, size, file type etc) The biggest issue that you have to learn is how to make the emote convey the meaning when the emote is small,most new emote artists add small details to enhance the expression but forget that it will be viewed in a very small size most of the time
So I'm making 1 or 2 sub emotes for a streamer and need a bit of information. Firstly I hear that emotes need to be submitted in 3 sizes: 28x28, 56x56 and 112x112.
I know that twitch emotes sizes should be 112x112, 56x56, 28x28 but when i draw in these sizes they are too pixelated.. I have seen some artists draw in 500x500. Does this mean that i draw a single emote in a 500x500 canvas and then just resize it to the required sizes?
EDIT: I used a website to adjust the size of my emote and re-download it but when i attempt to upload it to twitch the preview size still looks the same even though its the max pixel size which is the 112x112 im so confused
I'm making some emote work for a client who wants to use art for both Twitch emotes (28, 56, 112 px) and discord stickers (320 px.) What's a good canvas size to work in? I'm thinking about 500px canvas size but I apparently did 780px in the past and don't remember why, it feels a bit overkill.
1MB file size max for auto-resize mode. If using manual mode, each of the file sizes cannot exceed 512KB. The thumbnail for the animated emote will default to the first frame of the GIF. If you want to create a different thumbnail, this can be overridden with a custom static image (same requirements as emotes) GIF images cannot be more than 60 ...
This. I worked with a designer who had a Twitch account but never played with it and I had to walk her through several things in relation to my flairs and emotes. And for overlays she only uses OBS and has never touched Slobs or Twitch Studio. If you’re going to offer a service you should know how they work and what is required.
Yesterday mine got declined after a couple weeks and the only thing the email said was your emote must have the correct dimensions. I double checked my images, and they did have the correct size, not to mention if they were incorrect sizes I would not have been able to submit them (if you do a wrong size you get a pop-up that it must have x ...
It's great that streamers can now just upload emotes in one size, but based on my experience there will likely be quality issues depending on how Twitch scales them down. I'll still deliver emotes in all 3 sizes, so my clients can fall back on the legacy system if the new one doesn't work for them.