Archive for the ‘How-to’ Category

Yallery Features, Part 1

Thursday, November 8th, 2007

It occured to me that some references to Yallery site components and features in previous posts may have been confusing at best, and not very helpful at worst. This post is the first of likely many, to explain references like “Public Dashboard”, “Private Dashboard”, “Mosaic” and “Art Info Page”.

Yallery’s design utilizes a “Dashboard” method of display. This means that there are no pages on the Yallery site that scroll vertically or horizontally.

The Private Dashboard
The Yallery Private Dashboard provides members with tools to manage and administer their art and participation on Yallery. Depending on the member’s Member Type, art management applications, report generators, private message box, art comment notifications, forum link, event management and subscription/event/RSVP calendar are all accessible on this screen. A member’s Private Dashboard is only viewable by the owner and no other members may view this page or the information available through it.

screen capture of Yallery Private Dashboard

The Public Dashboard
The Yallery Public Dashboard is the world’s interface into the member’s art Catalogue (Artist members), Collection (Collector members) or Inventory (Gallery members) and ancillary information such as communication options (Bio/Statement, Forum, Website, Private Messages) and Event Calendars (Artist and Gallery members).

screen capture of Yallery Public Dashboard

The Mosaic
This feature is found in all Artist, Collector and Gallery member Public Dashboards. It is named the Mosaic because the contents are essentially art tiles. When visited by the Dashboard’s owner, the Mosaic displays all “public” and “private” artworks, otherwise only artworks designated as “public” are seen.

Artist members’ Mosaics are populated by their “Catalogue RaisonnĂ©.” The contents should encompass every work ever created by the artist whether it has been sold, consigned or held in the artist’s own inventory.

Collector members’ Mosaics are populated by their Collection. The contents include every work currently owned by the collector.

Gallery members’ Mosaics are populated by their current unsold and available Inventory.

Depending on the artwork’s context, there may be one of five backgrounds under the Mosaic Tile:

  1. Black/Transparent background Tiles are Unlinked
  2. Grey background Tiles signify Linked Artwork between Artist members and Collector members
  3. Green background Tiles signify Consigned Artwork between Gallery members (or non-members) and Artist members (or non-members)
  4. Red background Tiles signify “Private Artwork” and will only every be seen by the mosaic’s/dashboard’s owner
  5. Blue background Tiles signify Artwork that is currently in the Yallery Marketplace

By mousing over a tile, you may see the complete Artwork Title and Artist Name if it is shortened on the tile itself. To navigate the Mosaic, the viewer must click, hold and drag the mosaic in the direction away from the area they wish to view. The maximum size of the Mosaic is 10 x 10 tiles. To view an artwork in more detail, the viewer must double-click on the tile.

screen capture of Art Mosaic

The Art Info Page
The Art Info Page pops-up over the Public Dashboard after an artwork is selected from the Mosaic. This page provides a multitude of information about the art, from metadata to comments. When the Art Info Page is viewed by the Dashboard’s owner, it may display some Owner-only information such as the Public/Private state and/or location.

screen capture of Yallery Art Info Page

Photographing Artwork for Yallery

Monday, November 5th, 2007

We recognize one of the largest barriers preventing artists and collectors from placing all of their art on Yallery is a lack of photographs (or perhaps, a lack of quality photographs) of their art. Some artists have laser scans made of each artwork they create, so they may make high quality reproductions while other artists make quick photographs of their art before they are packed up and shipped off to a gallery or show.

Collectors and art owners are often told to document all of their possessions in the process of insuring their personal property, but art deserves special attention as there are unique identifying details that must be preserved and recalled during the insurance recovery process should the artwork ever be lost or stolen. The quality of insurance-inspired art photography is often very low.

Some collectors hire professional art photographers to document their collections. However, most art owners and collectors can’t afford this type of service. We believe high-quality collector-generated art photographs can be accomplished if a little time is invested and some simple rules are followed.

If you’re on a budget, smaller Items like glasswork, pottery and jewelry can be placed in a small homemade lightbox made from a large cardboard box with a hole in each side for a light, a sheet of poster board and two lights. The following image of an Aaronson Noon vase was photographed in such a box for my own Yallery Mosaic:

Lightbox Example

A great resource for art photography hints is over at Empty Easel:

How to Photograph your Artwork for a Portfolio or the Internet

Yallery enables artist members to “overwrite” photographs of linked works supplied by collector and gallery members with “official artist photographs” in the interests of preserving the artist’s vision and expression.

Yallery’s Image Formats
The artwork ingestion process requires one image upload for each item. Each photograph should be at least 1024 pixels (wide) by 768 pixels (high). This is also the size of our maximum image size.

Once an artwork image is loaded into Yallery, our software creates a square tile-sized image that is 100 pixels by 100 pixels for use in the member’s Public Dashboard “Mosaic”. A square medium-sized image of 300 pixels by 300 pixels is also created, to be used in Artwork Info pop-up windows. Images are masked with transparent space if the original image is not square.

Yallery also generates a large “full size” image size that is calculated to be within 1024 pixels (wide) by 768 pixels (high), using the largest side dimensions as a guide. This image is not masked.