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Is
the web killing good photography?
Steve
Nichols of InfoTech Communications (www.infotechcomms.co.uk)
thinks that we need to rethink our approach to the use of
intranet and internet images. If we don't he suggests we are
not doing our job and could be storing up problems for the
future.
How much
are you prepared to pay a photographer to take a good photograph?
I suppose it depends on your budget and the use to which the
photograph will be put.
A few
years ago we were all producing magazines and newspapers.
You had no alternative but to source good imagery. A photograph
that appeared across a double page spread had to be sharp,
well-exposed and have interesting subject matter.
There
was no fudging - it had to be good. Likewise, A4 front covers.
A full bleed four-colour front cover is at the limit of what
35mm can usefully deliver and even digital struggles a little
at this size, especially if you have to crop significantly.
But the
trouble is that many companies seem to be cutting back on
their photography budgets. Why? Because they don't see the
point in spending good money on an image that will end up
two inches wide on a web page.
Intranet
and intranet images are seldom more than about 250 pixels
wide. Even images that are slightly fuzzy hold up well at
this resolution. But lets face it, how many images do you
use on the web that would have gone in the bin if you were
still using print?
And because
the images are so small you don't feel that you can justify
the cost of commissioning a freelance photographer to take
them.
On nearly
all the digital photography courses I run the delegates are
there because they have been presented with a digital camera
and told to take their own images from now on.
This isn't
because digital photography is making it easier to take pictures
- a good 35mm camera is just as capable and costs less. The
answer is that someone, somewhere in their organisation has
decided that lower quality imagery is now acceptable.
But just
as a buying a word processor doesn't turn you into a journalist,
investing in a digital camera doesn't make you a good photographer.
I maintain
that it is now even more important for web images to be better.
Why? Because images lift web pages and reams of text are a
complete turn-off.
But technology
is also going to catch us out before long. At the moment,
computer monitors average about 15-17 inches. Their resolution
is about 72 - 96 dots per inch. That's why a 250-pixel image
appears to be between 2.5 and 3 inches wide.
But monitor
technology is improving and will ultimately be comparable
with print resolutions. When we have 300 dpi monitors, that
three-inch image is going to have to be much better. In effect,
we will have gone full circle and will need to put the same
amount of thought and consideration into our online photography
as we did for print.
And all
those grainy, blurry images that we have in our archive are
going to be useless.
But wait
for the future? Improve the way your images are taken and
presented now and your online readers will thank you for it.
Steve
Nichols (steve@infotechcomms.co.uk) runs InfoTech Communications
and is editor of this ezine. He has run courses on digital
photography for AWG, Standard Life, HBOS, Norwich Union, Guinness
and others. See www.infotechcomms.co.uk/courses.htm for more
details.
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