The Battle For Ownership Of Your Computer; Who’s Winning The War? Page 2
From Sunny Portland
Donald Higgs' website (www.dahphoto.com)
contains an eclectic mixture of styles that includes everything from people
and lifestyles to landscape to wildlife. The funny thing is that he does all
of them pretty well. Glacier National Park is one of the most beautiful places
on this planet, and Higgs' gallery contains images of awesome beauty along
with a few "so-what" shots. (See "Website Design Tip of the
Month.") He provides titles for his images, so I can direct you to "Grinnell
Pt.-Swiftcurrent Lake" to see the kind of scenic photography that many
aspire to but few accomplish. Site design may fit a widescreen format better
than the 3:4 standard, but just keep scrolling horizontally back and forth to
find new (and tiny) thumbnails and see them enlarged, if ever so slightly. As
falling down gorgeous as many of the Glacier National Park images are, the most
subtly spectacular images, such as "Red Barn & Rainbow," are
found in the Landscape & Nature gallery. There's even a section he
calls "Everything Else" that contains pictures of art glass that
Higgs could have added to People & Lifestyles and nobody would have known
the difference.
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It's Not Too Late
The January 2005 issue of Photo Industry Reporter contained a story about the
photographic highlights of 2004. One of them was the annual Take Your Camera
to Work Day to "celebrate photography worldwide." This year's
date is May 21, 2005, so visit the website (www.takeyourcameratoworkday.com)
and post images made beginning at midnight on May 21st capturing a
snapshot of the world.
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Website Design Tip Of The Month
Edit, edit, and then edit your images again. You don't have to show every
picture of the Statue of Liberty on your site, just the one. The only difference
between a print portfolio you schlep around to clients and potential clients
is that one is paper and the other is pixels. Edit ruthlessly; just show the
good stuff.
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