Skip to end of metadata
Go to start of metadata

You are viewing an old version of this page. View the current version.

Compare with Current View Page History

« Previous Version 2 Next »

Your website is responsive. That means it adapts so it can be viewed on different screen sizes. As such, your website might be viewed on anything from a widescreen monitor to a small portrait phone. These devices vary enormously in terms of both their size and their ratio. This makes choosing images and video for your website difficult as there is not one specific size that can be used.

As your website adapts, it will crop the image accordingly to ensure the image or video still takes up the entire screen whilst ensuring the image is not distorted. However, a portrait phone or a landscape desktop screen have completely different ratios. It means the height of your image or video will always fit the height of the screen, but the sides of the image or video will be cut off in order to preserve the image’s ratio.

Explaining image/video ratios

To use an example, if you have a landscape family photo and you attempted to put it in a portrait frame, it would either fit the width of the frame but have gaps above and below the image:

Or it would fit the height of the frame but the sides would not fit in:

Exactly the same principle applies to your website, we cannot make a photo maintain it’s ratio and fit in any screen size. It is simply impossible.

It is why you see black bars above or to the side of certain films or television programmes on your TV. It’s because they are filmed in slightly different ratios, and different TVs have different ratios as well. The black bard ensure the programmes ratio is maintained without distorting, whilst getting it to best fit on the television.

What do you recommend?

  • For images or videos that will be background on your website, we recommend you use abstract images/videos, or ones whereby it will not matter if the screen is cropped. This usually means:

Avoid:

  • Videos/images with wording in. Use plan images without wording, and simply add the wording as text to the website itself

  • Images/video where the image itself cannot be cropped (ie: portraits where the head is near to the edge of the image

Try to use:

  • Images with plenty of space either side or above the main subject

  • Wide drone footage or expansive backgrounds

  • abstract shapes/patterns or soft focus imagery

If in doubt, please contact us for advise before purchasing any stock photography/videos or commissioning photo or video shoots. We can then help advise for your website.

The following image displays how the website will crop an image:

  • No labels