Photo Optimization is necessary to
allow a web page to load in the shortest amount of time possible. Fast loading
time require small files. This article discusses the methods used for photo
optimization.
In an ideal world, a web designer could
use the highest quality photos and have the webpage download lightening fast.
Fast loading requires small file sizes for pictures. Unfortunately, there is a
trade off between picture quality and file size.
Web surfers are a notoriously impatient
bunch. If a website takes too long to load, they will just click away and never
come back.
Computer monitors can only display
images at 72dpi (dots per inch). So the first step in photo optimization is to
reduce the resolution to 72 dpi. Large picture can be sliced up into smaller
ones and the put back together on the web page. Each piece will be a very small
file and together will load in a fraction of the time a single image file would
load.
Most graphic files contain information
about the color palette of the image. This information is usually unnecessary
for displaying on the web. Many graphic programs included the ability to “Save
for the web”. This option discards all of the unnecessary information in the
file without any loss of picture quality.
Another method that appears to speed up
load time is to use either the GIF or PNG interlaced or the JPEG progressive
property. Both of these properties allow the picture to load gradually as first
a blurry image that becomes sharper and clearer. In reality the picture
actually loads a fraction of a second slower than the regular formats do but it
appears to load faster the site visitor.
Width and Height IMG Attributes
The HTML <IMG> tag tells the web
browser to create a specific sized box to hold the graphic. That way the
browser can continue loading the rest of the web page while the graphic file is
downloading. If you don’t put the width and height attributes, the web browser
must pause until the images is downloaded before it can load the rest of the page.
How Many Images
should you use?
Some web designers use images for
everything. While it may look good, it will definitely slow down the speed of
the page loading. Page loading speed in the sum of the HTML file plus the size
of all of the embedded files. Images constitute more than 50% of the download
time.
Using fewer images will speed download
time and just may keep a visitor from bailing through impatience.
Photo Quality
Photo quality is determined by the
clarity, color purity and detail of a photo. Use a graphic editor to remove
noise and other unwanted features. Most editors allow you to correct red-eye
and sharpen edges to improve clarity.
Professional editors like Fireworks or
Photoshop will let you change the background, adjust the color levels and do
almost anything else you want to do to the photo.
You can also use a thumbnail on the
webpage that links to a larger and higher resolution version of the image so
that people who want to can view it.
Photo Optimization
Guidelines
The following suggestions will allow
you to optimize your photos for fast download times without sacrificing picture
quality:
- Change the resolution of all images to 72dpi.
- Convert graphic text into stylized text.
- Crop the images to the actual size needed.
- Minimize color depth when it’s not necessary for quality.
- Specify the actual width and height of all images.
- Use thumbnails where appropriate.
Bottom Line – Graphics should enhance the content of a web page except in that rare occurrence where the images are the content. In either case, you need to optimize photos and other graphic files to allow for the fastest downloading time possible for the web page otherwise you risk losing the visitor forever.
Aqeel
Ahmed Zaman is
an Internet Business Consultant and Online Web Marketing Executive for Gexton
Pakistan. Gexton Pakistan offers the complete web
solution for your websites from web
design layout
to the Search Engine Optimization services.
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