Viewing Tips

Viewing This Site

This site was designed assuming the use of fairly recent browser versions.  If you are having problems viewing this site, there’s a good chance you should update your browser.

If the text on “text” pages of this site are too large or too small, just type Control Minus (-) or Control Plus (+) (Command on a Mac) to change it.

While this site was designed to accommodate a monitor resolution of 800x…, the viewing experience will be improved using a higher resolution both because of the greater image resolution and avoiding the possible need to scroll when viewing the larger images.  Most monitor screen resolutions can be adjusted.  For PC’s:  right click on the desktop and click Properties.  Then click on Settings and adjust the resolution.  On Macintosh: click System Preferences, then click Displays, found in Hardware, and adjust the resolution.

Those that are adventuresome may also try calibration either using their system software or, better yet, installed third party calibration systems for a truer representation of the images.

 

Browsing the Image Galleries

Clicking the “Galleries” button in the top menu will take you to a page that offers a choice of five “main” galleries in the left menu.  Clicking any one of those five will take you to the main page of that gallery with “sub” galleries.  To enter a sub-gallery, click on the name from the left menu or on the representative image for that sub-gallery.  This will take you to the first page of that sub-gallery that consists of live thumbnails.  Click any thumbnail and a larger version of that image with title and Image ID will pop up in a new window.  You may either close that window to return to the thumbnails or surf through the entire sub-gallery of images in the larger view.

Notice that you can surf through the thumbnail pages also and that your location in the gallery structure is indicated just under the top menu.  Both the thumbnail and the larger images have the Image ID’s that should be used for ordering or asking questions.

 

Peter Haigh Landscape Photography