dclark wrote:
The obvious step-up comparison is SmugMug. I pay $110/yr for a "Power" account. SmugMug is focused on photographers, both amateur and professional (although pros who want to sell on the web site need to pay more). SmugMug has a lot of easy to manage well designed photography oriented layouts, a good LR Publish module, and galleries are customizable. The customer support is superb. I have been a satisfied customer since shortly after they started business twenty years ago. But, it's not free.
Adobe Portfolio looks like a good option. It offers some good looking photo layouts, but with less flexibility and customization. Most photographers don't need either. And it's free with the LR/PS photography plan. ...Show more →
I use SmugMug too...its great
www.herbturner.smugmug.com
They will even store RAW files as well as videos. File size has to be less than 6GB!
Same here. Works great.in particular the Lightroom plugin makes it really easy to add a new gallery once you have preset for the gallery. Great and quick support, easy to change the design template.
www.clausschuster.com
Cheers Claus
Herb wrote:
I use SmugMug too...its great
www.herbturner.smugmug.com
They will even store RAW files as well as videos. File size has to be less than 6GB!
I have been using Adobe Portfolio, just to show some of my photos, I was going for something pretty minimal. The thing I like about it is that it integrates into Lightroom. I do wish the website pages would automatically refresh when I update the linked collections in Lightroom, but they do not, requires a pretty straightforward manual resync via Adobe Portfolio. The sorting of images isn't that great either. But its free (if you already pay for the Adobe subscription), so thats nice...
robsonj wrote:
I have been using Adobe Portfolio, just to show some of my photos, I was going for something pretty minimal. The thing I like about it is that it integrates into Lightroom. I do wish the website pages would automatically refresh when I update the linked collections in Lightroom, but they do not, requires a pretty straightforward manual resync via Adobe Portfolio. The sorting of images isn't that great either. But its free (if you already pay for the Adobe subscription), so thats nice...