|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
|
Hey all
I am new to this forum but I look forward to being an active poster. I am needing any tricks, tricks, pointers, tutorials, books or site referrals on how to best optimize photos for the web. I have a photo website that scales the image proportionally with the browser window within a fluid layout. so the file needs to be rather large in size (1700px wide) because of this I really need to get the file size as low as possible for decent loading times. up to now I have been using the save for web option in Photoshop CS4 and while the results are pretty good I do see better examples online and I would desperately like to know how to get my photos to look as good as some that I see. are there programs better at doing this the PS? (I am on a mac) is Fireworks any good at such things? would this be something that a action may be useful for? (should I condense using a stepped approach like when I am enlarging) is there a more efficient way to optimize the color palate? in some cases I see that 80 % of the photo can take a large reduction in size without affecting the quality much but the other 20% looks awful... Is there a way to selectively optimize (sorta like masking) or combining 2 optimized versions in to a median? really any tips would be greatly appreciated. thanks. |
|
#2
|
||||
|
||||
|
This is such a big question that itd be really hard for one person to write you a post that answered every question, I think.
A great way is to look into some of the other discussions here. |
|
#3
|
|||
|
|||
|
fireworks is used for getting photos and images ready for web use among other things. i have never heard about the quality median thing past maybe bringing the quality up. remember to look at the different file types as well as quality though. sometimes a gif might look just as good as a jpg but have a much smaller file size.
|
|
#4
|
|||
|
|||
|
Brsynk When you save for the web are you saving them as a Gif? Jpeg? Which format.
I upload my images to flickr all the time. I really don't see that big of a change. I just go to image/image size and change my size Pixel size or the resolution 72. Sometimes I do both if I know I am going to post an image to a forum to meet the requirements for that site. Try it that way and see what you think.
__________________
http://pursuingphotoshop.com/ |
|
#5
|
||||
|
||||
|
I agree with james_littler, browsershots for something like that would be a good choice, though you could go one step further and get some virtual machine software running with a copy of linux and try it in realtime.
|
|
#6
|
|||
|
|||
|
Hey all
I am new to this forum but I look forward to being an active poster. I am needing any tricks, tricks, pointers, tutorials, books or site referrals on how to best optimize photos for the web. I have a photo website that scales the image proportionally with the browser window within a fluid layout. so the file needs to be rather large in size (1700px wide) because of this I really need to get the file size as low as possible for decent loading times. |
|
#7
|
|||
|
|||
|
I'm a designer and I accept with information: fireworks is used for getting photos and images ready for web use among other things.
|
|
#8
|
|||
|
|||
|
i still prefer imageready over fireworks because it is really user friendly and in my opinion can't be compared with fireworks.
__________________
vintage rings |
![]() |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|