Sending your images/graphics to us


I spent the whole evening knotsurfing! Don't you mean netsurfing? No, everyone was complaining because I tied the computer up for ages!

When it comes to the subject of images and photos to use in your web pages our first question we ask is if you have your own business logo already designed...if the arnswer is yes, that's great...it will save a little cash and time. I you do not have one...no problem, we can design a simple unigue one for you optimized for the web enquire.

Using your own images and photos in your web pages not only enhances the look and assist in page layout, it also gives a visual display of your service to a prospective customer. Better still is displaying your work in a photo gallery.

Using well taken looking images will give a far more professional presentation to your pages rather than using clipart iamages that will have been around the web a zillion times over. Lets face it...you can get excellent results using a simple digital camara, a little care and perhaps half a day organising the images.

Another way of sourcing excellent images is by using a stock photo site. We use www.istockphoto.com/index.php which has quite literatly millions of profesional royalty-free photographs all moderatly priced along with a simple search function.

We except your image/graphics in most file formats and will optimize them acordingly. The PNG, JPEG, and GIF formats are most often used to display images on the Internet and are explained below:

  • JPEG
    JPEG (Joint Photographic Experts Group) files are (in most cases) a lossy format; the DOS filename extension is JPG (other operating systems may use JPEG). Nearly every digital camera can save images in the JPEG format, which supports 8 bits per color (red, green, blue) for a 24-bit total, producing relatively small files. When not too great, the compression does not noticeably detract from the image's quality, but JPEG files suffer generational degradation when repeatedly edited and saved. Photographic images may be better stored in a lossless non-JPEG format if they will be re-edited, or if small "artifacts" (blemishes caused by the JPEG's compression algorithm) are unacceptable. The JPEG format also is used as the image compression algorithm in many Adobe PDF files.
  • PNG
    The PNG (Portable Network Graphics) file format was created as the free, open-source successor to the GIF. The PNG file format supports truecolor (16 million colors) while the GIF supports only 256 colors. The PNG file excels when the image has large, uniformly colored areas. The lossless PNG format is best suited for editing pictures, and the lossy formats, like JPG, are best for the final distribution of photographic images, because JPG files are smaller than PNG files. Many older browsers currently do not support the PNG file format, however, with Mozilla Firefox or Internet Explorer 7, all contemporary web browsers now support all common uses of the PNG format, including full 8-bit translucency (Internet Explorer 7 may display odd colors on translucent images ONLY when combined with IE's opacity filter). The Adam7-interlacing allows an early preview, even when only a small percentage of the image data has been transmitted. PNG, an extensible file format for the lossless, portable, well-compressed storage of raster images. PNG provides a patent-free replacement for GIF and can also replace many common uses of TIFF. Indexed-color, grayscale, and truecolor images are supported, plus an optional alpha channel. PNG is designed to work well in online viewing applications, such as the World Wide Web, so it is fully streamable with a progressive display option. PNG is robust, providing both full file integrity checking and simple detection of common transmission errors. Also, PNG can store gamma and chromaticity data for improved color matching on heterogeneous platforms. Some programs do not handle PNG gamma correctly, which can cause the images to be saved or displayed darker than they should be.
  • GIF
    GIF (Graphics Interchange Format) is limited to an 8-bit palette, or 256 colors. This makes the GIF format suitable for storing graphics with relatively few colors such as simple diagrams, shapes, logos and cartoon style images. The GIF format supports animation and is still widely used to provide image animation effects. It also uses a lossless compression that is more effective when large areas have a single color, and ineffective for detailed images or dithered images.

Here is a list of FREE image opimizing tools:

Contact us for your new Website NOW enquire


>> I have read enough and want a website quote
>> I want to read about your World Famous Website Package
>> I only need one page...tell me more
>> FREE...did you say a FREE Website
>> Tell me about your Rental Options Plan