Overview
Creating an online photo portfolio can be a very tedious and laborious task. The personal showcase of your art works is the main indicator of your skills and abilities and makes a major impression on your site’s viewers. The importance of the issue may seem frightening, but there are certain principles that will help you create a really impressive and successful photo portfolio. In this article I’d like to concentrate on those principals and some common traps to be wary of while creating your portfolio.

Trap 1: Arrangement
The first thing that comes to mind is the very organization of a portfolio. Be attentive to the priority you give your artworks. Place an emphasis on your best works by presenting them before the others, as first impression is always important. If a viewer is captivated by your art at once he will be motivated to continue browsing. Interest him from the first works down and you will definitely get a chance to be highly appreciated.

Trap 2: Excessive Material
Don’t over saturate your portfolio with too many works. Be sure to put quality above quantity while deciding on your material. The old saying, “less is more” rings very true here. It is equally as detrimental to make your showcase too tight, as it will hardly add to its professional look. Attempt to design the elements a bit loosely and harmoniously. Stay away from showcasing too many of the same styles; this will help convey originality, so ¬the viewer will not become bored.

Trap 3: Beware of Trying Too Hard
Making a very complex portfolio won’t leave an impression of professionalism. Try not to invent something that you personally won’t be able to cope with. Make it simple and viewers will definitely appreciate how easy to use your portfolio is and will be able to focus on the artwork itself. Of course this doesn’t mean that your online showcase has to be overly plain. Make use of contemporary technologies, implement interactive elements and maybe include some flash animation – it will make your portfolio more live and vivid. Just don’t overdo it and remember that usability is very important.

Trap 4: Obscure Navigation
Don’t neglect the matter of clear navigation while constructing your portfolio. You will hardly be given a chance if your content can not be viewed properly. So be careful to avoid incomprehensible and confusing navigation, and nothing will prevent a visitor from evaluating the real quality of your works. Arrange photos in such a way that they can be viewed one by one with simple clicks, preferably in the same window, so the viewer won’t be confused with browsing. Let them quickly and easily estimate your little masterpieces by adding a comment right away with no additional clicks and transitions. The easier it is to browse, the best impression your photo portfolio will make on the viewer.

Trap 5: Decorative Mess
Of course you want to make your personal showcase the most striking and captivating one. For this purpose you can add different visual elements, white space and so forth; making your portfolio look more vivid and professional, but don’t overdo it as someone may become confused by the decorative mess your portfolio will become.
Final Thoughts
Being aware of all the matters listed above and concentrating on your objectives will help you go places for sure! What are your thoughts? What are some common pitfalls you’ve seen with photo portfolio sites?
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jorde
April 29, 2009
Thanks for the tips, I’m creating my portfolio. Though it’s probably going to take me forever because I’m too darn busy :P
Aimee
April 30, 2009
Good suggestions. I agree, keeping design clean & simple will allow visitors an enjoyable tour of your work…rather than a frustrating, navigational experience. You want them to remember the work, not the fact that they had to wait for bloated, over-designed pages to load. I always use physical gallery spaces as inspiration for my website galleries: keep ‘em clean, white and simple.
Maria Magkou
April 30, 2009
I appreciate your advice, thank you. I am creating a type of portfolio of my work as an educator and because the field is so broad that I do need to keep focused on my mission statement. It is becoming a good resource also.
Maria Magkou´s last post was… Preschool Trends for Children of Immigrants
raveesh
May 22, 2009
this to a certain extent applies to not only online photo portfolios but to all kinds of visual portfolios. ill surely keep in mind these when making my portfolio soon
thank you
raveesh´s last post was… pencil carving
Tiiu Napp
September 3, 2009
I find this information valuable because I am new to presenting my work online. I have been a freelance photographer for many years but moreso as a hobby. Now I want to set up an online portfolio to find work and raise funds for AIDS orphans, so that I can go on another mission to Cameroon. So my big question is if I make an online portfolio how do I protect my images. For those of you who are interested you can find some of my pictures on my website focus4africa.org. I would like feedback please. I am a rookie web designer. It happened when the guy I hired left town and me hanging with a partial website. thanks for any feedback.
.-= Tiiu Napp´s last blog ..Focus 4 Africa =-.
Andrew Houle
September 3, 2009
@Tiiu – Protecting your photography online can be a bit tricky, but there are some steps you can take to make stealing your photos a bit more difficult. Check out this article http://www.layersmagazine.com/protecting-whats-yours.html by Layers Magazine. That’s a good starting place.
Ronald
January 15, 2010
Absolutely protecting ones art is very difficult, especially when you open it up to the online world. I appreciate the information you provide. Heck I find it hard to even protect my work when its not online!!