How to evaluate and quickly set up your images for web usage
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You can set up image-exporting presets in software like Adobe Lightroom. This makes the exporting process fast. |
Audience & Target Use
Once you have photographs that are ready to be placed online, consider your audience and identify the target use of your photograph. Evaluating who will be viewing your photography and how your audience might use your online images will drive file preparation choices, including file sizes, sharpening, presentation and watermarking. These basic elements will make the world of difference to your viewers and enable you to make the greatest impact on them.
Here are some other considerations. Will your primary audience be critically evaluating your work, such as for an online portfolio review? Will they be glancing at it quickly, evaluating general impact, such as might be the case with a photo editor reviewing a large set of photographs? Will they be reviewing images in a photographer’s directory as an entrée to viewing your website? Recognizing your audience and understanding how they’re likely to use your online photographs will enable you to optimally prepare your image files.
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In Photoshop, you can save individual images sized for the web under the File menu. |
While some might subscribe to the philosophy that one size or one format fits all, the reality is that different audience types hold different expectations. For some, how fast a page and its photographs load is the critical factor, in which case, viewing a smaller photo or series of photos will be enough for the viewer to get a feel for a photographer’s work. On the other end of the spectrum, a viewer might be willing to endure a longer load time in order to see larger photographs with greater detail.
The general best practice is to size an image for display on the web between 500 and 900 pixels at the widest or tallest dimension. When determining the dimension size of an image, keep in mind the monitor size of your viewer(s) and the layout design of the web page displaying your photography. In relation to a personal website, one should avoid making viewers scroll horizontally to see an image in its entirety whenever possible. While monitors and their resolution increase in size, it’s a good idea to periodically check your website’s log to track display resolution trends of your site visitors. Tracking such trends will enable you to optimize the display of your work and enhance the user experience of your site.

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The Photoshop Save for Web & Devices dialog box. |
Image sharpness is by default paramount to photography, particularly when it comes to online viewing. Sharpening photographs for online display can be done in a generic fashion via application presets. Alternatively, those with a more discerning eye may want to utilize specific sharpening techniques to selectively sharpen portions of an image. Keep in mind no one technique will look best universally. The key is to experiment and see what looks best to your eye and to your specific photograph.
In Part II in the next issue of Digital Photo Pro, we’ll look at getting images set for final posting on the web by including the appropriate metadata and watermarks.