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Add Graphics to Your Website - without losing your mind!

By Rick Hunter

We've heard it over and over again - adding graphics to a website is a GOOD thing. They can generally make your site more appealing, illustrate points or products, and provide creative icons for people to click through for more information.

So you are developing a website, and you really want to add cool graphics. But how? Well, you can run out and buy a bunch of expensive graphics programs and 'dummies' books to learn how to use them. Or you can sign up for courses, on or off-line, for various amounts of money. But you'll probably be old and gray by the time you sort through all the mumbo-jumbo you'll need to sort through, or you'll be stressed to the max, and the opportunity your website originally presented will be long - gone.


Adding graphic images to your site should be easy and fun. It is possible to:

Throw the mumbo-jumbo commands, books, and classrooms out the window. If you just want to find graphics or photos you can use, start by doing a search on your favorite search engine(s) for 'royalty-free graphics.' You'll probably be kept busy for quite awhile chasing down the links you'll find. Many of the sites that provide these graphics also include instructions or coding to add them directly to your site - so you don't have to be a rocket scientist to jazz up your web pages, after all!


Here's a few things to remember when creating web graphics:

  1. Don't Sacrifice Speed For The Price Of Quality

Your main webpage should be under 40 KB in size for graphic intensive pages. Since a graphic file usually downloads slower than a normal text file (i.e. Html page), you have to ensure that your graphics are small, fast at loading and visually appealing at the same time.


  1. Graphics Should Be Appropriate, Not Just Look Good

One mistake a lot of web developers and Internet marketers make is putting "cute" online graphics or photos on a website just because they look good. This is a great technique if the images are relevant, irrelevant image placement just creates slower loading pages.


  1. Don't Use Graphics When You Can Use Text

One logo, no matter how small, could take up to 5 seconds to load on a website. While this may not seem like a great length of time, it could mean the difference between losing an impatient customer or getting the sale.

If your logos or graphics are based on simple fonts, then why use a graphic when one line of HTML code can produce the same text effect? And it'll take 1/100th of the time to load that one line of HTML as opposed to the graphic.

You can also learn - quickly and easily - how to 'jazz up' your own photos or images to add them to your site. For example, if you just need to prepare your GIF or JPG images for the web by compressing them so that they will load faster, check out the free, ready-to-use "image cruncher" utilities at - http://computer-newbies.com/beveldevil.

This software is really simple to use. It requires no knowledge of computers and it has a fast learning curve.

This is just one example of the information that's available on the web. With all the free and inexpensive online resources available to budding web designers, there's no excuse not to have a site that's jazzed up just the way you want it to be - without having to get a university degree or spend six months profit to do it.


About the author: Rick Hunter has more tools for new graphic designers at his website, http://computer-newbies.com/ezgraphics
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