Images to GIF Maker
Stitch two or more images into an animated GIF — free, with drag-to-reorder frames, adjustable speed, loop control, and output sizing. The encoder runs in worker threads inside your browser, so your photos are never uploaded anywhere.
How to combine images into an animated GIF with Allypdf
- Add two or more images — photos, screenshots, or design frames.
- Drag the preview cards into the order the animation should play; the numbered badges show the sequence.
- Set the frame delay, loop behaviour (forever, once, or a set count), and output width.
- Click Create GIF — it encodes locally with live progress and downloads immediately.
Why "no upload" matters here
GIFs get made from personal material: family photo bursts, kids' moments, work-in-progress designs, app walkthroughs that show real account data. An online GIF maker that uploads every frame to its server sees all of it. Allypdf encodes the animation in your browser's own worker threads — the frames and the finished GIF never leave your device.
Common uses
- Turn a burst of phone photos into a shareable animated moment.
- Assemble UI screenshots into a step-by-step product walkthrough for docs or a bug report.
- Preview an animation or banner sequence from individual design frames.
- Make a reaction GIF or meme from a handful of stills — with full control of the timing.
Frequently asked questions
How do I make a GIF from photos for free?
Drop two or more images onto Allypdf's Images to GIF tool, drag them into order, pick the speed and loop count, and click Create GIF. It's free, watermark-free, and the animation encodes right in your browser.
Can I change the order of the frames?
Yes — drag the preview cards into any sequence. Each card shows a numbered badge with its current position, and the GIF plays exactly in that order.
Are my images uploaded to a server?
No. The GIF is assembled and encoded by worker threads inside your own browser. Neither the source frames nor the finished animation is ever sent anywhere.
What if my images are different sizes?
The animation canvas takes its dimensions from the first frame. Other images are scaled to fit and centered with white bars where the aspect ratio differs — nothing is cropped or stretched.
Why is the GIF file so big, and how can I make it smaller?
GIF is a 256-color format that stores every frame, so large photo frames add up quickly. Choose a smaller output width (480px or 320px), use fewer frames, or increase the frame delay so fewer frames are needed — the size drops dramatically with width.
Related tools
- Compress Image — Reduce image file size free without visible quality loss. Compression runs in your browser — photos never leave your device.
- Resize Image — Resize images to exact pixels or percentages free. Runs in your browser so photos are never uploaded — fast and private.
- Convert Image to WebP — Convert JPG or PNG to WebP free for faster websites. In-browser conversion, no upload, no quality tricks.
- Convert Image to PDF — Convert JPG, PNG, WebP and more into PDF free. Combine multiple images into one file — all processed in your browser.