|
he last question to discuss here is, where can one find photo
imagery for spicing up web pages? There are lots of convenient
sources, and overall the process of getting a photo for your page is
likely to prove easier than you might think.
First and foremost, you can take the pictures you need yourself. You
don't need to be a professional photographer for this (just as you
don't need to be a design graduate to make great web pages).
Moreover, you have some serious advantages over any photographer
because, when taking a picture, you may already have an idea of its
future use on a web page. The very fact that you got inspired
with the idea of using photography in design guarantees that your
shots will be suitable for your pages.
Of course you must have at least some photography
experience. But the requirements you have to satisfy to
produce a web-usable photo are really very liberal. First of
all, for on-screen use you don't need high resolution---the
biggest image you can display on the Web is some 500 pixels
wide anyway. This means you won't need an expensive camera, a fine
low-grain film, or a high resolution scanner. Low-end or amateur
equipment will do for most cases.
Also, you don't need to hit the mark very precisely.
Photoshop, as well as its more affordable analogs, will gladly let
you correct some over- or under-exposition, color balance, as well
as to cut out exactly the part of the photo you need. All you
need to do is to take a lot of pictures under various conditions
until one of them satisfies you.
However, the most common source of photography for design needs is
various stock photo agencies, i.e. companies that collect and resell
the production of professional photographers. Now nearly all
of these agencies are selling scanned digital images (not prints or
transparencies), most often on CDs or online.
Digital stock photos have lots of advantages: they're very high
resolution (a single image may take up to tens of Mb),
professionally scanned, retouched and color corrected, they're
royalty free and have model releases (i.e. the persons pictured have
signed a statement that they won't mind your using their portraits).
Most importantly, they're professionally done, which means you'll
get not only a material to work on but also a powerful inspiration
for your design.
The only disadvantage is that these photos
aren't your creation.
On the other hand, the diversity of imagery offered by big agencies
is really beyond imagination, so the chances of finding exactly what
you need are pretty good. Even simply browsing a catalog or
online collection of stock photos may prove an exciting experience
giving lots of ideas and inspiration. Stock Photo Network is a good starting
point for your research into the field.
Quoting one of the finest stock photo suppliers, Photodisc:
"As little as seven or eight years ago, stock photography meant one
thing: full-color images of people and places---people centered in
the frame, smiling, laughing, walking on the beach, sitting behind a
computer... typical representations of families, technology, and
business. But today, anything goes---concept photographs,
alternative processes, black and white images, you name it."
|