• site home
  • blog home
  • galleries
  • contact
  • underwater
  • the bleeding edge

the last word

Photography meets digital computer technology. Photography wins -- most of the time.

You are here: Home / The Last Word / A new web site — implementing with Photocrati

A new web site — implementing with Photocrati

September 26, 2016 JimK Leave a Comment

This is a continuation of a series of posts about reworking my website into one that is entirely WordPress based. The series starts here:

A new web site – general requirements

Sorry about the lack of a post yesterday. I decided that I’d done enough messing around with Photocrati in my sandbox to have a pretty good idea that I could make it work for my main web site, so I put my head down and started to implement. You can see how far I’ve gotten here. That link will work for at least a week. By then I may have gone live at www.kasson.com with the new WordPress implementation.

One of the first issues that I had to deal with was which of the many NextGEN Pro gallery display formats I wanted to use. I settled on NextGEN Pro Mosaic, which dynamically re-scales images so that they fill up the page without cropping. The NextGEN grid methods crop, even when you tell them not do in the settings — there has to be something that I don’t understand about that. The Pro Mosaic display allows for captions and social media tools to be displayed when you mouse over an image. I would prefer the captions to be visible at all times under the image, but that’s not an option.

I tried many times, and failed every time, to make the album display feature work. No matter what I did, when I’d place an album into a page, I’d get an icon with a red X through it in the editing window, and nothing in the user’s view window. My workaround is to create a page with example images from each gallery, with the title of the gallery in the caption. Then I make the caption a hot link. I’d never tried to hot-link with a caption before, but it works just fine.

I ran into some interesting NextGEN gallery behavior while I was working around the album issue. After you’ve installed NextGEN, when you insert an image you have the option to insert it from a NextGEN gallery. Not only that, there’s an option to have the image scaled down. However, when it scales to the size that I want, it crops the image arbitrarily. So I created the thumbs in Lightroom.

There are some galleries that I haven’t yet implemented. I’m thinking about leaving the underwater pictures pretty much as is, and changing the menus to make getting back and forth from the WordPress part of the web site to be pretty seamless, although the look and feeel will be different. The reason is that each of the underwater pictures has a long caption, and, giving the fact that the latest picture there is more than ten years old, it’s probably not worth it for me to emulate that by hand in WordPress.

[Added 1:00 pm. I’ve now gotten enough confidence in the new main site that I’ve pointed the Home item in this blog’s top-level menu to it.]

The Last Word

← A new web site — using Photocrati for the blogs When ppi matters — and when it doesn’t →

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

May 2025
S M T W T F S
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
« Apr    

Articles

  • About
    • Patents and papers about color
    • Who am I?
  • How to…
    • Backing up photographic images
    • How to change email providers
    • How to shoot slanted edge images for me
  • Lens screening testing
    • Equipment and Software
    • Examples
      • Bad and OK 200-600 at 600
      • Excellent 180-400 zoom
      • Fair 14-30mm zoom
      • Good 100-200 mm MF zoom
      • Good 100-400 zoom
      • Good 100mm lens on P1 P45+
      • Good 120mm MF lens
      • Good 18mm FF lens
      • Good 24-105 mm FF lens
      • Good 24-70 FF zoom
      • Good 35 mm FF lens
      • Good 35-70 MF lens
      • Good 60 mm lens on IQ3-100
      • Good 63 mm MF lens
      • Good 65 mm FF lens
      • Good 85 mm FF lens
      • Good and bad 25mm FF lenses
      • Good zoom at 24 mm
      • Marginal 18mm lens
      • Marginal 35mm FF lens
      • Mildly problematic 55 mm FF lens
      • OK 16-35mm zoom
      • OK 60mm lens on P1 P45+
      • OK Sony 600mm f/4
      • Pretty good 16-35 FF zoom
      • Pretty good 90mm FF lens
      • Problematic 400 mm FF lens
      • Tilted 20 mm f/1.8 FF lens
      • Tilted 30 mm MF lens
      • Tilted 50 mm FF lens
      • Two 15mm FF lenses
    • Found a problem – now what?
    • Goals for this test
    • Minimum target distances
      • MFT
      • APS-C
      • Full frame
      • Small medium format
    • Printable Siemens Star targets
    • Target size on sensor
      • MFT
      • APS-C
      • Full frame
      • Small medium format
    • Test instructions — postproduction
    • Test instructions — reading the images
    • Test instructions – capture
    • Theory of the test
    • What’s wrong with conventional lens screening?
  • Previsualization heresy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Recommended photographic web sites
  • Using in-camera histograms for ETTR
    • Acknowledgments
    • Why ETTR?
    • Normal in-camera histograms
    • Image processing for in-camera histograms
    • Making the in-camera histogram closely represent the raw histogram
    • Shortcuts to UniWB
    • Preparing for monitor-based UniWB
    • A one-step UniWB procedure
    • The math behind the one-step method
    • Iteration using Newton’s Method

Category List

Recent Comments

  • JimK on How Sensor Noise Scales with Exposure Time
  • Štěpán Kaňa on Calculating reach for wildlife photography
  • Štěpán Kaňa on How Sensor Noise Scales with Exposure Time
  • JimK on Calculating reach for wildlife photography
  • Geofrey on Calculating reach for wildlife photography
  • JimK on Calculating reach for wildlife photography
  • Geofrey on Calculating reach for wildlife photography
  • Javier Sanchez on The 16-Bit Fallacy: Why More Isn’t Always Better in Medium Format Cameras
  • Mike MacDonald on Your photograph looks like a painting?
  • Mike MacDonald on Your photograph looks like a painting?

Archives

Copyright © 2025 · Daily Dish Pro On Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in

Unless otherwise noted, all images copyright Jim Kasson.