Thursday, 8 September 2011

Website research


Creating A Website

I've started to look at information on how to set up a website and the important stages I need to address for it to be successful. The information I find will make me more informed for when I actually do set one a professional website in the summer.

Domain name

A domain name is the name you give to your website, so it is vitally important that it links in with your company or what is on your website. To get a domain name, you have to pay an annual fee to a registrar for the right to use that name. Naming your site after your domain name is very important. You want everything to reflect your business and it makes it easier for people to remember you. If your not easy to remember then people won't revisit or recommend your website, so potentially you could loose business.

Web Host

Web host is basically a company that has many computers connected to the Internet. When you place your web pages on their computers, everyone in the world will be able to connect to it and view them. You will need to sign up for an account with a web host so that your website has a home. If getting a domain name is analogous to getting a business name in the brick-and-mortar world, getting a web hosting account is analogous to renting office premises for your business.
Free Hosting: The criteria for choosing a free web host and a commercial web hosting solution are slightly different although they do overlap. Free web hosting will often contain advertising to cover the cost of "renting the space to you". The extent of the advertising will range from a little box in the comer of the screen, or can be as bad as a range of annoying pop ups. So it is important to look into the different companies that offer free hosting, as some might be more professional than other. Web space and file size will often be restricted as they are offering a limited service. Speed of connection is another thing I've found you need to appreciate; the free services are generally slower, which may put people off if they have to wait for your site to load. The main thing to consider is, if you have a free website you will have a sponsored domain name, I.E. www.yourdomain.piczo.com this effectively makes a free website less professional.
Commercial Web Hosting: Basically as you're paying for the service you generally get fast bandwidth (connection speed), no advertising, high disk capacity etc.
"If you ate paying for a site, you really should make sure you have all of these.
Note that some commercial hosts do not allow you to install PHP or Perl scripts without their approval. This is not desirable since it means that you have to wait for them before you can implement a feature on your site. ".htaccess" is needed if you are to do things like customize your error pages (pages that display when, say, a user requests for a non­existent page on your site) or to protect your site in various ways (such as to prevent bandwidth theft and hotlinking, etc).
Telnet or SSH access is useful for certain things, including testing certain scripts (programs), maintaining databases, etc. MySQL ("What is MySQL?") is needed if you want to run a blog or a content management system. Cron is a type of program scheduler that lets you run programs at certain times of the day (eg, once a day). Check to see if these facilities are provided" - http://wW\Y. thcsitewizard.com/archive/findhost.html
Your often provided with an e-mail address with the same domain as your website. For example, zoeyroberts@zoeyrobertsphotography.com, which is obviously more professional to the clients and is definitely something worth considering.

Looking at the type of sever your going to pay to use is important. Whether you think so or not on the theoretical level, there are a few practical reasons for looking out for the type of server.
In general, if you want to use things like write/use ASP programs, you have no choice but to look for a Windows server. Otherwise my preference is to sign up for accounts using the often cheaper, more stable and feature-laden Unix systems running the Apache server. In fact, if dynamically generated pages that can access databases (etc) is what you want, you can always use the more portable (and popular) PHP instead of tying yourself down to ASP. Another reason to prefer Unix-based web hosts (which include web hosts using systems like Linux, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, Solaris, etc) using the Apache web server is that these servers allow you to configure a lot of facilities that you typically need on your site (error pages, protecting your images, blocking email harvesters, blocking IP addresses, etc) without having to ask your web host to implement them.
The cost is also another benefiting factor that you be considered so shop around!

Creating a webpage

The webpage needs to look professional so you can either look for templates (which you can pay for and customise yourself) OR you can pay a web designer to create one for you. Make sure you look at lots of photography web sites so that you can consider the key elements to a successful one. Personally I feel that the key elements to a photography website are:
That the website is minimal
Exceptionally structured (clearly laid out etc)
My thoughts:
From my research I feel that a free website will be inadequate for when I'm hunting for freelance work. However I've been looking into template websites (due to the basic nature of photography web sites I didn't feel I needed to pay for one to be designed) and I've come across WIX.com, their websites allow to adapt flash templates to be very personal. They also give you the option to actually change your website from being a free website to a hosted website as they own their own sever. So I will be able to create a website now for free, edit and adapt it as I please and then when I'm ready I can just change the host type and pay a subscription. So I will be starting a WIX website very soon!



Sunday, 1 May 2011

Barbican Dance Theatre

Whilst progressing with work for the Barbican Theatre, documenting their upcoming performance of 'Driving Deco'. Me and Corinna were asked by a couple of the dancers, Nadjeschda Schaefer & Beth Thompson, if we would do a shoot for them, so that they have some professional photographs for their portfolios. I had looked into dance photography for the work for Driving Deco so I felt confident that we could pull this off. I arranged with the girls to meet at my house and we would use my living room as a backdrop as we could light it so it would be bright so that we could capture their movements. We hired some lights from the college and Wide angle fast lenses, so that it could handle the speed in which the girls moved, so that the movement will be captured in sharp detail.

Nadjeschda Schaefer

Beth Thompson

I really wasn't happy with this shoot, I felt extremely pressured and very unprofessional. The girls didn't know what I wanted and everyone was frustrated. Especially as neither me or Corinna had bothered to find out the names for specific dance movements and without being able to do them ourselves it was hard to communicate what we wanted. 


Thursday, 10 March 2011

BusyBusyBusy!

This week has been most productive and I finally feel like I'm on my feet and enjoying my briefs!
I have conducted lots of research regarding movement photography, in particular dance. So I felt it was time to be active and get the equipment to actually experiment. Here are some of my experiments with fabric:




I don't feel very confident with flash lighting, however I think these turned out quiet well! Any feedback would be great :)

Friday, 4 March 2011

Contextual Studies.

I've been ignoring my blog recently because work-based learning is over and this is such a painful reminder of that subject! Anyway ... over the last few weeks I've written my contextual studies essay on "How consumerism has affected Fashion", I personally think it failed but we will see when the marks come back. Secondly my group and I have started planning our contextual exhibition, the blog for this is:
It has taken me a while to truly understand what we are trying to achieve with this task but I think I now understand. It will be really fun to explore all the possibilities for an exhibition and hopefully it will make any exhibitions I am apart of in the future, more successful. I'm very thankful of having such a pleasant group & I'm sure our work will be very successful.

Thank GOD! its not another essay... 

Thursday, 17 February 2011

Photography Studio Equipment: Studio Safety: Studio Equipment for Photography | eHow.com

I just thought I would post this video relating to studio health and safety as it was really educational. Safety in the workplace is very important :) CLICK THE LINK! Photography Studio Equipment: Studio Safety: Studio Equipment for Photography | eHow.com

Wednesday, 16 February 2011

Gideon Mendel

                            


Gideon Mendel was a visiting photographer that we had come in on the 27th January (this is a late post!) 

Gideon Mendel is widely regarded as one of the world's leading contemporary photojournalists.  Born in Johannesburg in 1959, he studied psychology and African history at the University of Cape Town. Following his studies he became a freelance photographer, documenting social change and conflict in South Africa in the lead-up to Nelson Mandela's release from prison.

In 1990 he moved to London, from where he has documented social issues in Africa and globally.
He has been documenting the impact of HIV/Aids in Africa for more than 12 years, working in 10 different countries to show the many ways the disease has devastated the lives of millions of ordinary people.

He continues, in his current working practice, to work for some of the world's major magazines while also developing new advocacy projects. He has recently begun a major new body of work on the impact of climate change on the world's poorest people. 

From listening to Gideon I found him really inspiring, some of his work was really emotional and clearly trod a fine line between invasive and educational. I learnt a lot from his work but more regarding the subject of HIV than of his photographic technique! I did however find out that a lot of his work is shot of 120 film of a Roliflex.

Tuesday, 15 February 2011

Interview Replies

It is definitely too late to achieve a face to face interview and a portrait, which I'm really gutted about! I've finally got e-mail replies from some Midlands photographers, Paul Beard and Edward Moss. Sammy Southall was to busy to help me via e-mail but she said I could of visited the studio and done it in person (I wish I could of looked but it was just to far away). The Plymouth photographers weren't so helpful ...
Several of the wedding photographers I e-mailed didn't e-mail back so I've been waiting around. I've decided to e-mail John Miles & Nina Therese today as they work together as wedding photographers but separately they have totally different specialisms. I just thought their dynamic was original and so the work is a little more creative! They probably won't e-mail me back in time to be able to submit the interview but to be honest I'm just curious to what they have to say :)