I had a lot of trouble with this project. I decided to randomly record footage of my workplace using my Apply iPod Touch. I took a 37 second video file, and opened it into Adobe Photoshop. I switched the Photoshop workspace to Motion, and when I played the video, it was really slow. I converted the Timeline format into frames using the option Flatten Frames Into Layers. After about half an hour of waiting, the process finished, and I ended up with 1114 layers. Then, I selected Convert to Frame Animation. Seeing that 1114 layers was a bit too much to work with, I made it so that I would merge every 50 layers, so I ended up with Layer 50, 100, 150, etc. It was about 22 layers at the end. Using the Animation Tab, I made 24 frames, and made 1 layer visible per frame. Then, I saved the file using Save for Web & Devices... to save the file as a .gif and also selected Loop Forever so that the .gif would play continuously, and the .gif was saved using the Bicubic quality.
Here is the plain .gif.
I found out that you could use the various image adjustment masks that applied to the entire video clip/gif file. Here's an edit made turning the image into Black and White.
I added the Invert adjustment to the Black and White .gif just for fun.
I took each frame, and made the visible layer a Soft Light blending option, and made the layer beneath that visible as well. I thought it came out pretty cool.
And here it is in color with the Soft Light blending from above.
Edit:
I feel that these gifs relate to Time, Depth, and Space because the frames from the gifs were taken from a video. Only certain 20 something frames from that video were kept out of 1114. It's kinda like how time is always moving, and you take X amount of pictures, which are "frames" of your memory. As for depth, a video is a 2D representation of a 3D space, and I took this 2D video, and made it spin along the Z axis, so to speak. And the space was a computer lab.
Edit
Because I didn't illustrate the concept of "depth" enough, I decided to try the project again, but with different subject matter. Here are a few .gifs taken from the lecture hall TD 1701.
Here is the first .gif with Vibrance, Brightness Contrast, Hue Saturation, and Photofilter adjustments using masks.
This .gif uses Soft Light in the same way that I did the first set of .gifs with.
For more emphasis on the depth aspect, I made the .gif black and white, and then prolonged the frames that contained the images I wanted the viewer to note, such as what the camera was focusing.