| 1. | What is this? |
| This is a gallery of my photography, artwork, and design projects. |
| 2. | What is the purchase link for? |
| For viewing the gallery, there is of course no cost. But if you wish to use my work in a commercial publication or on your website, you can purchase a copy at the original size and resolution. $5.00 entitles you to 10 uses. |
| 3. | What if I need to use more copies? |
| Simply purchase additional copies, in blocks of 10 licenses. Soon, volume discounts will be available. |
| 4. | What if I don't need all my licenses for one image? |
| Licenses are universal--they can be used for any image. If you purchase 10 licenses for image A and 10 for image B, you can use 19 copies of A and 1 of image B. |
| 5. | What are licenses? |
| Licenses are equivalent to royalties you pay for commercial use of my work. |
| 6. | Do I have to pay to use your images on my personal website? |
| You can use the low-resolution (72dpi) 400-height preview version of any image at no cost, for personal or commercial use. You only need to pay to use the full-size version. But you must credit the work to Jesse Cian Fawcett - www.thednegroup.com |
| 7. | What is dpi? |
| Dpi stands for "dots per inch". Each image is compost of coloured dots. The more dots are packed into a given space, the higher the quality and the more the image can be enlarged. |
| 8. | What is px? |
| Px stands for pixels, the dots that a monitor uses to display an image. width x height px is a standard expression for the dimensions of an image. |
| 9. | What do these resolutions mean? |
There are a few common resolutions:- 72dpi is used for most commercial print publishing applications. Web browsers also display all images as 72dpi. Many digital cameras also use 72dpi as the default resolution.
- Some printing houses use 75dpi
- 150dpi is a universal standard resolution for faxing.
- 300 dpi provides higher quality for editing graphics at the time of creation. My images created from scratch are usually 300dpi.
- 600dpi provides very high quality for making small printed text readable in a scanned document.
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| 10. | What about the original size? |
| This is the unedited size at which the image was created, after cropping where applicable. For reference, the thumbnail images are 80 height, the preview images are 400 height, and the original aspect ratio is maintained. |
| 11. | I paid, now what do I do? |
| You will be taken to a page with a link to download the image. Right-click the link and select "Save Target As..." and select the location you want to save it in. Most of the images are around 1MB. |
| 12. | I paid, but I couldn't download the image. What should I do? |
| Contact me at galleryadmin@dneproductions.com using the same email address you used for payment. It is important that they match exactly. I will send a download link through email. Failing that, I will attempt to send the image through email as an attachment. If that doesn't work, we can try other ways of getting the image to you. |
| 13. | I accidentally paid for the wrong image. What do I do? Can I get a refund? |
| No refunds will be issued, due to the processing cost. Simply contact me at galleryadmin@dneproductions.com using the same email address you used for payment (it is important that they exactly match), and state which image you wanted. I will send you the correct link. |
| 14. | What did you use to create these images? |
| The vast majority of the photographs are taken with a Toshiba PDR-M700 or Olympus Camedia 450D Digital Camera. I also use a Wacom Graphire3 Graphic Tablet and a Hewlett Packard Scanjet 4670 scanner. For software, I use Adobe Photoshop, Macromedia Fireworks, Macromedia Flash, Alias/Wavefront Maya, Bryce, and various plugins. |