bmac said:What do you look for when going to a photographers website?
Brian
The site is good, but I am bothered by the artist's use of blurring. It is as if he thinks his compositions are not strong enough without literally dictating the viewer's focus. Many a good picture ruined in my tiny opinion.jnanian said:mark tucker's is one of the nicest i have seen
Dead Link Removed
bmac said:I'm in the planning stages for a much needed redesign of my website. It's been over two years since I put it up, and want to add a lot of new stuff to it. I've spent the last few days clicking around the web checking out photographers sites and have been really disapointed for the most part. It seams that a lot of photographers think they are web designers... most arent
What are your favorite photographer website? what do you like about them? What do you look for when going to a photographers website?
Brian
mrcallow said:The site is good, but I am bothered by the artist's use of blurring. It is as if he thinks his compositions are not strong enough without literally dictating the viewer's focus. Many a good picture ruined in my tiny opinion.
mrcallow said:what about Dead Link Removed
Images are sized based upon browser size (hit reload if you resize your browser). Photography is the best on the web and I have absolutely no affiliation with this site.
mrcallow said:The site is good, but I am bothered by the artist's use of blurring. It is as if he thinks his compositions are not strong enough without literally dictating the viewer's focus. Many a good picture ruined in my tiny opinion.
hither said:Iwanted to comment on Tucker's work as well, but mainly to say that I wonder what he is using to get the DOF trickery. Almost the same affect one gets reversing a 55mm lens in lieu of a macro lens. Is he a Lensbaby user? No "how I dunnits" on his site, though the work is quite strong.
mrcallow said:what about Dead Link Removed
Jorge said:Funny, I kind of liked the way he printed with the blurr. My problem is that it was done in too many of the prints. In some it added to the quality of the pics, in others I found myself saying " I wish he had printed everything sharp on this one."
doughowk said:3) Javascript. Lack of a standard of support among all browsers - have to design for MS Internet Explorer, then do work-arounds for Netscape/Mozilla, etc..
doughowk said:2) Frames. Very "old" web techonology started by Netscapeback around 2.5-3.0 version. Is supported on most browsers. Does enable a menu system combined with thumbnails with photos appearing in one frame ( good technology for when most people had dial-up connections). Main problem with frames is fault of unoriginal designers ( ubiquitious top-banner with left-side menu & center display space, scroolbar & frame visibility, etc.).
Mongo said:Check out Dead Link Removed
David A. Goldfarb said:I plead guilty--top banner, left side menu, right side display space (not that different from center), scrollbar for the menu frame, depending on screensize.
http://www.echonyc.com/~goldfarb/photo
Now that I look at it, the top bar doesn't really do much. I had plans for it originally, but I could probably replace it with a link back to the main page in the menu frame.
Design suggestions that don't introduce browser incompatibilities, require plug-ins, or slow things down are welcome. I pretty much hand code everything, but occasionally I'll use a shareware program called Web Weaver, which has some handy shortcuts for tables and such.
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