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ith the rapid improvements in display devices,
full-color photographs are no more "approximated" on computer
screens as they once were, but can now be rendered with better
quality than even on paper. This allows photography to take
its due position in web design, similar to the position it has
occupied in this century in mainstream graphic design.
Computer-specific bells and whistles, such as interactivity and
animation, will let you blend online photography with the elements
of cinema and other visual arts. However, these are only
extras. A carefully selected and integrated still photo per
se can have a surprising impact in a design composition.
It can be an excellent eye-catcher and a drastic improvement even
for a beginner's work.
Just as software graphic tools relieve you from the necessity to
draw simple geometric
forms by hand, photos will help if your design needs complex,
life-like forms---on photos, these forms are supplied thick as
blackberries. Thus, photography fits well into the concept of
design as using other people's art
that we discussed last month. This doesn't mean, of course,
that you don't have to be creative yourself---but only that your
creativity will get a powerful impact of inspiration.
So why does photography attract the eye in such a particular way?
How to best utilize its effect in web design? This article
attempts to answer these questions, as usual, by looking at some
well designed sites and by pondering upon the general principles
they illustrate. The three parts of the article discuss what photos to
use, where
to find them, and how to integrate
them into the page. | |