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When used
correctly, graphics add to the attractiveness
of a web site and contribute positively to a
visitor's first impression of the site.
However, the reverse is also true. If a web
site is unattractive, a visitor will be
negatively affected and may click away from
the site, never to return.
Use common sense when including any graphics
on your web pages. More is NOT better! Don't
plaster your site with graphics, clip art, and
animated gifs. An excessive number of graphics
makes for slow page loading times, clutters
the web page, annoys visitors, and makes it
difficult for a potential customer to read a
sales message.
Only use a graphic if it contributes something
to the web site. You may want to include a
header graphic for site recognition, a graphic
representation of your product, arrows or
check boxes to draw attention to important
sales points, and a button for your payment
link. A footer graphic, buttons for your
navigation menu, and/ or a background image
may also be added if desired. If you include
any other graphics, only do so if they add
something positive to your site.
Use only JPG or GIF formats for your graphics
as these two formats are used universally on
the Internet. Although PNG format is starting
to come into use, it is not widely used as it
is not supported in all browsers.
There are many places from which you can
obtain images. You can use images you've taken
yourself, images that you've purchased, or you
can download free images from web sites such
as Free Images at
http://www.freeimages.co.uk/
which offers over 2500 free photos or from
Stock.xchng at
http://www.sxc.hu/
which has over 100,000 free photos for you to
choose from. There are also numerous sites
that offer graphics such as buttons, arrows,
clip art, GIFs, etc. Some of these are free,
others you must purchase. If you do decide to
use a free image or graphic, be prepared to
spend hours wading through thousands of images
or graphics to find the one you want.
For faster page loading, you will need to
optimize your images and graphics by reducing
them to their smallest size while still
retaining their quality. The larger the file
size, the more KB it will take up and the
longer it will take to load. Don't use any
graphic larger than 30 KB on your web pages
and always include a height and width
attribute in your image tag for optimal
download time.
You can optimize your graphics and images with
one of these tools:
1) Download PIXresizer, a free image resizer
from Bluefive software at
http://bluefive.pair.com/pixresizer.htm.
2) Dynamic drive offers a free online image
optimizer for JPG, GIF and PNG formats at
http://tools.dynamicdrive.com/imageoptimizer/.
Use JPGs for photos and GIFs for other
graphics on your web site such as buttons and
arrows. JPGs can use a compression method that
does not reduce the number of colors in the
image which is why JPGs are good for photos.
GIFs can only use a 256 color palette and are
generally better for graphics containing few
colors. If you have a GIF with a lot of
colors, you may want to save it as a JPG to
preserve quality.
The first graphic a visitor sees on entering
your web site is your header graphic so it
should communicate what the content of your
site is about. A header graphic should be part
of a web site's identity so use it on every
page of your site.
Think of your header graphic as if it were the
cover of a book. A book cover is meant to grab
the attention and curiosity of the user and
entice him or her to open the book. A header
graphic has the same kind of purpose. Your
header graphic should entice your visitor to
stay on your site and have a look around. It
should convey the feeling that there is
something worth further exploring on your
site.
If you are selling a product, include an image
of the product. This is especially important
for ebooks and software that are downloaded
from your site. Since these products are
virtual products and not physical ones, your
customer will feel more secure about
purchasing the product if they can see a book
cover or software box.
Use graphics of arrows or check boxes to draw
attention to the most important parts of your
sales message. Be conservative in their usage.
If you use too many, your visitor will start
ignoring them and what they point to.
You will need some sort of button for your
payment link. This can be a simple "Pay Here"
type button or a more complex one which
includes images of credit cards along with
payment information. Use the type that fits in
with the theme of your web site.
Your footer may be just a narrow colored strip
or a miniature version of your header graphic.
It should always include your copyright
information.
Your background image, background color, the
colors used in your text, and the colors in
your graphics shouldn't clash. The components
of your web page should harmonize. Look at how
everything comes together as a whole, not at
the individual graphics.
No matter how many graphics you use on your
web site, they should be appropriate for the
theme of your site. If your site is soft and
romantic, use pastel colors and muted
graphics. On the other hand, if your site
screams boldness, use bright colors and brash
images.
Graphics can be an important part of any web
site design. Use them correctly and they will
be come an asset to your site. Use them
incorrectly and they will become a burden.
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Ian Del Carmen is an online business
professional running his main site at
http://www.ianDelCarmen.com. His other
sites include
http://TheOnlineBusinessProfessional.com,
http://MobileEbooks.net,
http://InfoProductLaboratory.com, and many
more...
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Article Copyright © 2006 ArticleEveryday.com. All rights reserved
worldwide.
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