Forum Moderators: not2easy
I have noticed such images on a lot of sites are PDFs;these seem to be even larger. What is the advantage, if any.
Also, would it be better to have these pages open in a separate window?
A smaller version of the floor plan, about half-size, could be a link to the larger version.
PDF files are annoying. They seem to be popular with people who find them easier to create than Web pages. We shouldn't have to download a file and open it in another application just to see a picture.
With the graphics themselves I have no problem, having been a professional graphic artist for 15 years, I can make about anything look good. Being new at web design, I was just curious about how most people handle the large images. I don't know why you should have smeared or jagged edges on proper jpegs (with line drawings, etc., you need to use grayscale--not black and white).
However, because size is suddenly a consideration (not a problem at all when designing for other media), I tried an RGB gif. It looks almost as good as the grayscale jpeg and it's half the size. Thanks.
Use Photoshop's "Save for the Web" (ImageReady) to compare gif and jpg appraoches, and those algorithms usually do the best job.