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Just curious if you prefer dark or light background colour schemes in websites you visit, especially photography sites.
Feel free to explain why and/or vote.
I'm just revamping an old site and can't decide whether to go for light or dark background.
Feel free to explain why and/or vote.
I'm just revamping an old site and can't decide whether to go for light or dark background.
mgilbuena
San Francisco Bay Area
For forums, white. This especially helps on mobile devices as it is difficult to read white-on-black on a small screen such as an iPhone.
For photographic sites, I enjoy either -- as long as it is pure white or black.
For photographic sites, I enjoy either -- as long as it is pure white or black.
sisser
Established
Light color or white is so much easier to read. Hate the black graveyard background.
x-ray
Veteran
sepiareverb
genius and moron
White. Likely because I'm used to looking at images on paper.
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Looks good Don. One or two little niggles with it. The sideways scroll bar always appears at 1024 screen width. Doesn't obscure anything as no scrolling to right is required but the scroll bar doesn't need to be there untill something is obscured.
Also there is no apparent way to come out of flipping through images. I discovered Esc key does it but its not obvious.
Overall I think I prefer white backgrounds. However, dark backgrounds have greater initial impact but after a while looking at them I want to switch to light backgrounds. I think there is a lot of visual psychology going on with backgrounds like with bokeh which is why I'm asking other peoples view on it.
Also there is no apparent way to come out of flipping through images. I discovered Esc key does it but its not obvious.
Overall I think I prefer white backgrounds. However, dark backgrounds have greater initial impact but after a while looking at them I want to switch to light backgrounds. I think there is a lot of visual psychology going on with backgrounds like with bokeh which is why I'm asking other peoples view on it.
Lauffray
Invisible Cities
Depends on your content, despite what people usually think BW images look better on mid grey backgrounds (I decided to ignore this and use black on my website
)
I personally find colour pictures to look better on white backgrounds.
If you have a lot of text, then white background.
The thing you have to remember in design is that the enclosing color influences our perception of the colours inside. So the same red square on a black background will look darker than on a white background
I personally find colour pictures to look better on white backgrounds.
If you have a lot of text, then white background.
The thing you have to remember in design is that the enclosing color influences our perception of the colours inside. So the same red square on a black background will look darker than on a white background
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So far loks like a 50 50 split between light+white and dark+black so I guess there's nothing saying dark or light is preferable over the other albeit a small sampling so far.
I'm thinking I may split the difference and use a dark background with white framing around the images which looks quite nice.
I'm thinking I may split the difference and use a dark background with white framing around the images which looks quite nice.
Godfrey
somewhat colored
My photos are balanced for printing on archival papers with generous borders, so a neutral to slightly warm toned off-white background shows them off best. It's easier to read black or dark grey text on the background too. (RFF's black is very poor on readability.)
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(RFF's black is very poor on readability.)
Yes and no. If you have monitor calibrated for colour printing then YES its poor because the brightness level will be too low. But if you have a fancy new monitor which are very bright then its fine. I use the VBP Iskin cos I struggle to read it with the default skin.
shimokita
白黒
For text I prefer white background/ black text. For images I tend to prefer gray background or if white at least the image with a dark (/black) border.
Casey
Casey
rluka
Established
Maybe darker background.
Not that white background is bad, but on screen and if the pictures are much smaller than the whole canvas, that white background cause glare, especially if the room is dark (either way, not good for the eyes)
Not that white background is bad, but on screen and if the pictures are much smaller than the whole canvas, that white background cause glare, especially if the room is dark (either way, not good for the eyes)
thegman
Veteran
I think it depends on the overall style. I find RFF in dark easy to read, and Ken Rockwell on white easy to read. I think photographs often look good against black, especially colour shots.
I think if you don't have much text though, it does not matter too much. If you do have a lot of text, think about text size, formatting etc.
I think if you don't have much text though, it does not matter too much. If you do have a lot of text, think about text size, formatting etc.
Sylvester
Well-known
Prefer black for slide show looking site, white if there's text.
bhop73
Well-known
I put 'not bothered', but honestly, it depends on the site design. I'm a graphic designer so I think about that kinda stuff..
olle
Fujifilm
depends on the content. I'm more content with black or dark backgrounds. When it comes to photography, it's definitley Pure Black though, white I find too harsh.
daveleo
what?
I settled on #404040 ( a dark grey) for a background color on my own photo pages (which have virtually no text). I display pictures with wide white or black borders to simulate them mounted, and it works nicely in my opinion.
Lawrence Sheperd
Well-known
I prefer a neutral grey or black for viewing photos, white with black lettering for text-heavy sites. I use AutoCad 8 hours a day and find if I don't set my drawing background to dark grey I have a raging headache at day's end.
jtm6
Well-known
I like black backgrounds, but I can no longer read white text on black due to ocular headaches. I had to switch the theme here to white.
benlees
Well-known
I just recently switched RFF to the white background after only ever using the black background, which I quite like. No real preference. Will probably switch back and forth.
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