Free Photography Html Templates

Make Money With your Photos
So you learned to take a great picture and now you would like to make some cash from them (and of course, share your artwork with the world). Here are three ways you can go about this without costing you a fortune.
–Create your own products using your photos, such as framed prints, greeting cards or t-shirts, and sell them on Ebay. Ebay receives millions of visitors eager to buy, provides easy step by step instructions on getting you set up (their website also offers advice and tips on selling) and costs are very minimal. You have the choice to auction your product or let your customer “buy now”. Your biggest investment in this is producing your products.
–Sell products on Cafepress. They provide the products (framed prints, t-shirts, coasters, mousepads, clocks, teddy bears and much more) which you will apply your photos to (just upload and add to the product you choose) and they provide complete service (orders, delivery, complaints). You build your store (through their website) either using one of their templates or you can customize your own using HTML. They have a base price for each product and you set the price above that. You are paid the price above the base price. You can open a free store or you can pay a small fee each month and receive more benefits. Thou your products will appear in their Marketplace (which they receive millions of customers) so will millions of other products. So your biggest investment here is to advertise your store. I am not going into advertising here but there are free and low cost ways of doing this (read articles regarding this matter).
–Submit your photos to online stock agencies such as Shutterstock, Fotosearch or iStockphoto. Stock agencies house large files of images and markets the photos to potential clients. You are paid a percentage or a set price of each sale. You give these clients permission to use your photo (such as in their magazine or on their personal website) but they can not resell to profit from.
Whichever way you decide to sell your photos, the better the resolution your pictures are, the better the quality. To achieve this, first you must have a high megapixel digital camera. This does not mean you need to buy the top of the line. A 5 megapixel is quite sufficient. Second, your picture should have a high DPI (dots per inch) such as 300. If you want a high quality 8×10 inch picture, you will multiply the DPI by the inch. For instance, 8×300=2400 and 10×300=3000 so you want your picture size (resolution) to be 2400×3000 pixels. You can always decrease the size of your picture but never increase the original size.
Before joining any program, be sure to read their terms carefully. I wish you much success!
About the Author
About the Author:
Diana Cooper specializes in nature and wildlife photography.
Visit http://www.dianasphotography.com for photography tips and articles.
To visit her cafepress store, go to http://www.cafepress.com/dianasphotos
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Get Your Photography on the Web (Paperback) $23.74 In Get Your Photography on the Web, RC Concepcion, curriculum developer for Kelby Media Group and one of the Photoshop Guys, takes you through an easy step-by-step process so you can build your own site from the ground up and have it look like you paid someone a lot of money to do it for you. Even if you know nothing about Web programming, this book will have you building a website in hours, not weeks.You`ll learn:-How to secure your own domain names and hosting space-How to install WordPress on your website in as little as seven clicks-How to add pictures, galleries, and Flash portfolios without learning any code-How to sell your images online without having to make a single print-How to incorporate Lightroom and Flash galleries into an already existing websiteYou`ll also find interviews and inspirational tips from people you will meet "Along the Way" to making your website. Plus, RC gives you free templates and Flash portfolio components to get you up and running without emptying your wallet.The techniques RC shares in Get Your Photography on the Web are the very same ones he uses for some of the biggest names in photography it`s like designing your website with a trusted expert looking over your shoulder. Best of all, you`ll walk away with the satisfaction of knowing that you did it all yourself! |
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HTML & CSS (Paperback) $22.74 HTML and CSS have dominated web development for more than a decade, but these technologies — and the ways developers use them — have accumulated some incredible and intricate junk along the way. In HTML & CSS: The Good Parts, author Ben Henick removes the junk code, the bolted-on parts, and all those ideas that once made sense to reveal a core set of reliable components that will spare you hours of battling browsers and adjusting page layouts. This book covers all aspects of web page design, from typography and color to layout, to help you: Learn which pieces of HTML and CSS deserve focus, and which can be abandoned Discover how the two technologies tightly mesh Understand how the Web 2.0 era has changed the way we use HTML and CSS Set priorities and choose components that will work reliably across sites and browsers Recognize the bad and downright awful parts of HTML and CSS, along with the good, to understand why warning labels are sometimes necessary Whether you handcraft individual pages or build templates, HTML & CSS: the Good Parts will help you get the most out of HTML and CSS without being trapped by junk code. |
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Teaching and Learning With Digital Photography $30.69 This all-in-one guide offers early childhood educators concrete examples for integrating digital photography into teaching and assessment and includes a CD-ROM with user-friendly forms and templates. |

