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What size photos will people download?

web-sized photos

         

timchuma

12:33 am on Mar 25, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



I have been taking photos of bands recently in small venues around town and then posting them on my site.

The originals are at 1600x1200 (around 500kb), but I have been resizing them to 800*600 (100kb) so they don't take as long to upload over my dialup connection.

At the moment I am getting a lot of people looking at the photos section of my site, but I am wondering whether I should provide an option to let people download the full sized photos so they can make their own prints of them (usually $1.50 per print at the stores I go to.)

Also I have had a few requests for sets of photos from particular events on CD. I usually just send a copy of the originals in case they want to edit them. Should I send the ones I have edited as well if they don't know how to do this?

Thanks.

mivox

12:59 am on Mar 25, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Thumbnails on the website, linked to a ~50K image, with a "download 100K version" text link...

...when sending out CDs of photos, include copies of the 50K, 100K and unedited images.

That's what I'd do, anyway. :)

HarlsenC

7:09 pm on Mar 25, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



The general rule of thumb, as I understand it, is that [free] pictures should be no more that 50kb. It's nice to see that you are putting 800X600 pics on your site. I've been to too many music/band sites which offer tiny pics, little bigger than thumbnails, in their galleries.

If you don't have one, you can easily download a free jpeg resizer/optimizer from a download site. The best ones show the original image on the left and the optimized one on the right - with a 'slider' under the original. The further you slide along the more the image is optimized - just stop when you find a happy medium between file-size and quality.

You could use a micro-payment system to sell your pics. For example: reverse-sms. Your visitors text a number + a keyword of your choice. They recieve a text back (instantly) with a code which they can use to get the pic. Their bill is charged, say $3 and the reverse-sms company give you $1.50. You could do this to sell a single picture or batch of pictures.

Their are of course, other versions of micro-payments and credit-card processors. The problem with the latter is that can't really charge less than $5.

Hope it helps,
HarlsenC