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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#1
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Sorry if this annoys anyone, but I did head the post accordingly!
I've decided to review my pricing structure, firstly to make it easier to communicate to customers and secondly to increase my margin. I'm constantly booked up for weeks ahead & the Fair Trader thing is generating extra business - I also feel it adds value to my services (I'm the only accredited handyman in the scheme). If anyone would care to comment I'd appreciate your thoughts. Off group if you prefer The charges are on my site http://www.medwayhandyman.co.uk/www/charges.htm Thanks in advance. -- Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk 01634 717930 07850 597257 |
#2
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The Medway Handyman wrote:
Sorry if this annoys anyone, but I did head the post accordingly! I've decided to review my pricing structure, firstly to make it easier to communicate to customers and secondly to increase my margin. I'm constantly booked up for weeks ahead & the Fair Trader thing is generating extra business - I also feel it adds value to my services (I'm the only accredited handyman in the scheme). If anyone would care to comment I'd appreciate your thoughts. Off group if you prefer The charges are on my site http://www.medwayhandyman.co.uk/www/charges.htm Thanks in advance. To increase your margins, I would put your first hour up to £49-95 and pro rata after that. Costs have gone up in the last year, so why have yours not? I went to my local ex Rover garage today to have 2 stop/tail lights changed and he only charged £2-00. . The bulbs must cost that much. I told him that it was too cheap, but he said that it was customer service and that it would bring more custom back. But £1-00 for a bulb change looks like too small a cost to me. Dave |
#3
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The Medway Handyman wrote:
Sorry if this annoys anyone, but I did head the post accordingly! I've decided to review my pricing structure, firstly to make it easier to communicate to customers and secondly to increase my margin. I'm constantly booked up for weeks ahead & the Fair Trader thing is generating extra business - I also feel it adds value to my services (I'm the only accredited handyman in the scheme). If anyone would care to comment I'd appreciate your thoughts. Off group if you prefer The charges are on my site http://www.medwayhandyman.co.uk/www/charges.htm Thanks in advance. I assume it would be preferable to both you and your clients if you did full days rather than an hour here and an hour there? If it were me, I'd charge minimum £50, then £25 PH thereafter, or a full day for £200...but you need to be careful, part of the reason your orderbook is full is because of the charges, and once customers are lost, they are lost forever. If you are managing comfortably at this moment in time (and you should be), I'd be tempted to leave things as they are. |
#4
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On Thu, 17 Jan 2008 22:43:14 +0000, The Medway Handyman wrote:
I've decided to review my pricing structure, firstly to make it easier to communicate to customers and secondly to increase my margin. The first hour/subsequent hours doesn't seem too hard for anyone you'd want to have as a customer :-) As for actual figures, someone once said that you should expect to lose half of your leads on price! -- John Stumbles This sig intentionally left blank |
#5
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On 2008-01-17 22:43:14 +0000, "The Medway Handyman"
said: Sorry if this annoys anyone, but I did head the post accordingly! I've decided to review my pricing structure, firstly to make it easier to communicate to customers and secondly to increase my margin. I'm constantly booked up for weeks ahead & the Fair Trader thing is generating extra business - I also feel it adds value to my services (I'm the only accredited handyman in the scheme). If anyone would care to comment I'd appreciate your thoughts. Off group if you prefer The charges are on my site http://www.medwayhandyman.co.uk/www/charges.htm Thanks in advance. I think that this is a good structure and reasonable price points. |
#6
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On 2008-01-17 23:16:43 +0000, Dave said:
The Medway Handyman wrote: Sorry if this annoys anyone, but I did head the post accordingly! I've decided to review my pricing structure, firstly to make it easier to communicate to customers and secondly to increase my margin. I'm constantly booked up for weeks ahead & the Fair Trader thing is generating extra business - I also feel it adds value to my services (I'm the only accredited handyman in the scheme). If anyone would care to comment I'd appreciate your thoughts. Off group if you prefer The charges are on my site http://www.medwayhandyman.co.uk/www/charges.htm Thanks in advance. To increase your margins, I would put your first hour up to £49-95 and pro rata after that. Costs have gone up in the last year, so why have yours not? I went to my local ex Rover garage today to have 2 stop/tail lights changed and he only charged £2-00. . The bulbs must cost that much. I told him that it was too cheap, but he said that it was customer service and that it would bring more custom back. But £1-00 for a bulb change looks like too small a cost to me. Dave I think that there is truth in that, but I don't like £49.95. It looks like a cheap shop gimmick for £50. £45 or £55 looks better IMV. |
#7
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On 2008-01-17 23:44:11 +0000, John Stumbles said:
On Thu, 17 Jan 2008 22:43:14 +0000, The Medway Handyman wrote: I've decided to review my pricing structure, firstly to make it easier to communicate to customers and secondly to increase my margin. The first hour/subsequent hours doesn't seem too hard for anyone you'd want to have as a customer :-) As for actual figures, someone once said that you should expect to lose half of your leads on price! .... or be in a business where there isn't competition on price.... |
#8
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![]() "The Medway Handyman" wrote in message .uk... Sorry if this annoys anyone, but I did head the post accordingly! I've decided to review my pricing structure, firstly to make it easier to communicate to customers and secondly to increase my margin. I'm constantly booked up for weeks ahead & the Fair Trader thing is generating extra business - I also feel it adds value to my services (I'm the only accredited handyman in the scheme). If anyone would care to comment I'd appreciate your thoughts. Off group if you prefer The charges are on my site http://www.medwayhandyman.co.uk/www/charges.htm The daily charges are in line with what I've just paid to have a doorway put between two of my factories. However, having said that, I thought it was a bit steep and, if it had not been a friend of a friend, I would probably have looked for someone a bit cheaper. Colin Bignell |
#9
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"The Medway Handyman" wrote in message
.uk... Sorry if this annoys anyone, but I did head the post accordingly! I've decided to review my pricing structure, firstly to make it easier to communicate to customers and secondly to increase my margin. I'm constantly booked up for weeks ahead & the Fair Trader thing is generating extra business - I also feel it adds value to my services (I'm the only accredited handyman in the scheme). If anyone would care to comment I'd appreciate your thoughts. Off group if you prefer The charges are on my site http://www.medwayhandyman.co.uk/www/charges.htm Thanks in advance. -- Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk 01634 717930 07850 597257 Too cheap. If you charged out 8 hours a day, 5 days a week for 48 weeks of the year - extremely unlikely - you would still only be pulling in £42,000 a year - before all your costs (except materials). Your skills are worth more. |
#10
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rrh wrote:
"The Medway Handyman" wrote in message .uk... Sorry if this annoys anyone, but I did head the post accordingly! I've decided to review my pricing structure, firstly to make it easier to communicate to customers and secondly to increase my margin. I'm constantly booked up for weeks ahead & the Fair Trader thing is generating extra business - I also feel it adds value to my services (I'm the only accredited handyman in the scheme). If anyone would care to comment I'd appreciate your thoughts. Off group if you prefer The charges are on my site http://www.medwayhandyman.co.uk/www/charges.htm Thanks in advance. -- Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk 01634 717930 07850 597257 Too cheap. If you charged out 8 hours a day, 5 days a week for 48 weeks of the year - extremely unlikely - you would still only be pulling in £42,000 a year - before all your costs (except materials). Your skills are worth more. Without wishing to sound disrespectful, for a Handyman I would suggest the prices sound quite reasonable. Let's not bump the price of a Handyman into the realms of the saintly professional plumbers and sparks. I suppose only TMH can answer this - look at your average weekly hours charged, and decide then that the business can bring in a respectable wage. Although I'm guessing that is precisely what you have done with your post. For what it's worth - I'd be more inclined to "get a man in", having seen a published charge list - and the prices you charge appear fair, than doing a lot of the DIY myself. |
#11
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On 2008-01-18 07:56:25 +0000, Mike Dodd said:
rrh wrote: "The Medway Handyman" wrote in message .uk... Sorry if this annoys anyone, but I did head the post accordingly! I've decided to review my pricing structure, firstly to make it easier to communicate to customers and secondly to increase my margin. I'm constantly booked up for weeks ahead & the Fair Trader thing is generating extra business - I also feel it adds value to my services (I'm the only accredited handyman in the scheme). If anyone would care to comment I'd appreciate your thoughts. Off group if you prefer The charges are on my site http://www.medwayhandyman.co.uk/www/charges.htm Thanks in advance. -- Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk 01634 717930 07850 597257 Too cheap. If you charged out 8 hours a day, 5 days a week for 48 weeks of the year - extremely unlikely - you would still only be pulling in £42,000 a year - before all your costs (except materials). Your skills are worth more. Without wishing to sound disrespectful, for a Handyman I would suggest the prices sound quite reasonable. Let's not bump the price of a Handyman into the realms of the saintly professional plumbers and sparks. I suppose only TMH can answer this - look at your average weekly hours charged, and decide then that the business can bring in a respectable wage. Although I'm guessing that is precisely what you have done with your post. For what it's worth - I'd be more inclined to "get a man in", having seen a published charge list - and the prices you charge appear fair, than doing a lot of the DIY myself. I think that the prices are quite reasonable, although as you say, he could get more, in stages. From past discussions, the catchment area is one of people who are (relatively) cash rich and time poor and who may well not feel that they can tackle DIY jobs anyway - for example putting together IKEA furniture. So the comparison is not one of "do I DIY?" or "do I get a man in?" but of "are the prices and timescale reasonable as compared with possibly a collection of single tradespeople?". The second case is less price sensitive because people are willing to pay for convenience. |
#12
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![]() I went to my local ex Rover garage today to have 2 stop/tail lights changed and he only charged £2-00. . The bulbs must cost that much. I told him that it was too cheap, but he said that it was customer service and that it would bring more custom back. But £1-00 for a bulb change looks like too small a cost to me. Dave It's known as 'a sprat to catch a mackerel'. ie. They hope to lure you in when you need a big job doing. mark |
#13
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Andy Hall wrote:
I think that there is truth in that, but I don't like £49.95. It looks like a cheap shop gimmick for £50. £45 or £55 looks better IMV. After reading my last night's post, I tend to agree with you about that. Dave |
#14
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Mark wrote:
I went to my local ex Rover garage today to have 2 stop/tail lights changed and he only charged £2-00. . The bulbs must cost that much. I told him that it was too cheap, but he said that it was customer service and that it would bring more custom back. But £1-00 for a bulb change looks like too small a cost to me. Dave It's known as 'a sprat to catch a mackerel'. ie. They hope to lure you in when you need a big job doing. I trust him completely. There are only 3 garages in England that I would trust to do work on my cars and he is one of them. He started his business from the ashes of Rover's Phoenix dealership when they went bust. He has done lots of little jobs and never charged for them, to the extent that I am now getting embarrassed after I ask how much and he says nothing, its customer service. Dave |
#15
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On Thu, 17 Jan 2008 22:43:14 GMT, "The Medway Handyman"
wrote: Sorry if this annoys anyone, but I did head the post accordingly! I've decided to review my pricing structure, firstly to make it easier to communicate to customers and secondly to increase my margin. I'm constantly booked up for weeks ahead & the Fair Trader thing is generating extra business - I also feel it adds value to my services (I'm the only accredited handyman in the scheme). If anyone would care to comment I'd appreciate your thoughts. Off group if you prefer The charges are on my site http://www.medwayhandyman.co.uk/www/charges.htm Thanks in advance. Reduce the differential between your 1 hour and 8 hour rates but don't increase the rates for 8 hours. I would be baulking at paying more than 175 quid a day for a 'handyman' (no offence meant) whereas I'd consider 45 quid for the first hour (where all your costs are) quite reasonable. Around here (oop north) tradespeople look to earn 150 quid per day ish. |
#16
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On Thu, 17 Jan 2008 22:43:14 GMT,it is alleged that "The Medway
Handyman" spake thusly in uk.d-i-y: Sorry if this annoys anyone, but I did head the post accordingly! I've decided to review my pricing structure, firstly to make it easier to communicate to customers and secondly to increase my margin. I'm constantly booked up for weeks ahead & the Fair Trader thing is generating extra business - I also feel it adds value to my services (I'm the only accredited handyman in the scheme). If anyone would care to comment I'd appreciate your thoughts. Off group if you prefer The charges are on my site http://www.medwayhandyman.co.uk/www/charges.htm Thanks in advance. The prices look very reasonable to me, the only comment I have from viewing that page is (unrelated to the prices): The logo at the top left takes a few seconds to load, even on broadband: if any of your customers are on dialup (a few might still be), the load time would be extreme, which might put them off, it may be better to resize it in photoshop or similar rather than using the browser to resize it. Having said that, it's probably nitpicking, your customers might not be Victor Meldrew's relatives g) -- _ ( ) ASCII ribbon campaign against html e-mail X and usenet posts / \ |
#17
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Dave wrote:
Andy Hall wrote: I think that there is truth in that, but I don't like £49.95. It looks like a cheap shop gimmick for £50. £45 or £55 looks better IMV. After reading my last night's post, I tend to agree with you about that. Me too - £49.95 looks like Netto, £55 looks like M&S. |
#18
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HI All
On Sat, 19 Jan 2008 17:05:09 -0000, "Steve Walker" wrote: Dave wrote: Andy Hall wrote: I think that there is truth in that, but I don't like £49.95. It looks like a cheap shop gimmick for £50. £45 or £55 looks better IMV. After reading my last night's post, I tend to agree with you about that. Me too - £49.95 looks like Netto, £55 looks like M&S. I've agonised over that one as well (with my glass crafts on the open-air markets). Eventually decided on pricing pretty much everything in multiples of 5 euro - saves a heck of a lot of mental gynastics working out totals, and carrying around loads of coin change - and I don't think that customers are fooled anymore by the ' €24.99 is much cheaper than €25.00' trick.... Shor myself in the foot in the run-up towards Christmas - offered 10% off everything - (worked well!) - but used up loads of coins to give people their discount... They do say that it still works for larger purchases like cars and houses - don;t know how true that is ? Got a car to sell in the near future - maybe I'll try the €XX,750 approach and see if it works...? I think the 'Netto VS M&S' simile is a good one for the craft sales though - thanks guys ! Adrian |
#19
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"The Medway Handyman" wrote in message
.uk... Sorry if this annoys anyone, but I did head the post accordingly! I've decided to review my pricing structure, firstly to make it easier to communicate to customers and secondly to increase my margin. I'm constantly booked up for weeks ahead & the Fair Trader thing is generating extra business - I also feel it adds value to my services (I'm the only accredited handyman in the scheme). If anyone would care to comment I'd appreciate your thoughts. Off group if you prefer The charges are on my site http://www.medwayhandyman.co.uk/www/charges.htm Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk 01634 717930 07850 597257 Just a tiny thing... the first hour says "inc travel" Does that mean you charge for the travelling time, or just for the time actually spent at the customer? (sorry to be a pedent, comes from having to interpret requirements docs.) cheers, Neil |
#20
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On 2008-01-19 18:11:25 +0000, Adrian said:
HI All On Sat, 19 Jan 2008 17:05:09 -0000, "Steve Walker" wrote: Dave wrote: Andy Hall wrote: I think that there is truth in that, but I don't like £49.95. It looks like a cheap shop gimmick for £50. £45 or £55 looks better IMV. After reading my last night's post, I tend to agree with you about that. Me too - £49.95 looks like Netto, £55 looks like M&S. I've agonised over that one as well (with my glass crafts on the open-air markets). Eventually decided on pricing pretty much everything in multiples of 5 euro - saves a heck of a lot of mental gynastics working out totals, and carrying around loads of coin change - and I don't think that customers are fooled anymore by the ' €24.99 is much cheaper than €25.00' trick.... No. Especially as presumably you are not selling junk. Do you remember that some goods (especially consumer electricals) used to be priced in Guineas? This was effectively the opposite way up. Shor myself in the foot in the run-up towards Christmas - offered 10% off everything - (worked well!) - but used up loads of coins to give people their discount... They do say that it still works for larger purchases like cars and houses - don;t know how true that is ? Got a car to sell in the near future - maybe I'll try the €XX,750 approach and see if it works...? XX+1,250 or XX+1,500 would be better. Then you can come down. I think the 'Netto VS M&S' simile is a good one for the craft sales though - thanks guys ! ... and hopefully you have better than M&S offerings anyway. |
#21
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HI Andy
On Sat, 19 Jan 2008 19:29:40 +0000, Andy Hall wrote: On 2008-01-19 18:11:25 +0000, Adrian said: HI All On Sat, 19 Jan 2008 17:05:09 -0000, "Steve Walker" wrote: Dave wrote: Andy Hall wrote: I think that there is truth in that, but I don't like £49.95. It looks like a cheap shop gimmick for £50. £45 or £55 looks better IMV. After reading my last night's post, I tend to agree with you about that. Me too - £49.95 looks like Netto, £55 looks like M&S. I've agonised over that one as well (with my glass crafts on the open-air markets). Eventually decided on pricing pretty much everything in multiples of 5 euro - saves a heck of a lot of mental gynastics working out totals, and carrying around loads of coin change - and I don't think that customers are fooled anymore by the ' €24.99 is much cheaper than €25.00' trick.... No. Especially as presumably you are not selling junk. That's what I felt - but modesty forbids g Do you remember that some goods (especially consumer electricals) used to be priced in Guineas? This was effectively the opposite way up. Oh yes - that dates us both, doesn't it ? Gentlemens' Suits, as well..... Twas on odd unit - the guinea - according to wiki "the term guinea survives in some circles, notably horse racing and in the sale of rams" - so there you go .... Shor myself in the foot in the run-up towards Christmas - offered 10% off everything - (worked well!) - but used up loads of coins to give people their discount... They do say that it still works for larger purchases like cars and houses - don;t know how true that is ? Got a car to sell in the near future - maybe I'll try the €XX,750 approach and see if it works...? XX+1,250 or XX+1,500 would be better. Then you can come down. Yes - that's sort of what I meant - but the algebra defeated me... I think the 'Netto VS M&S' simile is a good one for the craft sales though - thanks guys ! .. and hopefully you have better than M&S offerings anyway. Oh I do hope so........ Interesting, if not a little disturbing really... I was at an event before Christmas where I was selling my handmade glass - pair of one-off earrings on silver for 20 euro - that sort of price range. Nice fellow on the next stall was very proud of the fact that he'd bought all of his stock wholesale for the USA (and presumably they bought it from China). Showed me a beaded bracelet priced at 30 euro - proudly told me that it only cost him 4 dollars - and indicated that was the level of markup he expected on all of his stock.... Thing is, I'd not be happy just buying it in, marking it up and selling it on - it's the making / creating that's the kick for me... ....guess I'd be a lot richer, though ! g Ho hum Adrina |
#22
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Neil wrote:
"The Medway Handyman" wrote in message .uk... Sorry if this annoys anyone, but I did head the post accordingly! I've decided to review my pricing structure, firstly to make it easier to communicate to customers and secondly to increase my margin. I'm constantly booked up for weeks ahead & the Fair Trader thing is generating extra business - I also feel it adds value to my services (I'm the only accredited handyman in the scheme). If anyone would care to comment I'd appreciate your thoughts. Off group if you prefer The charges are on my site http://www.medwayhandyman.co.uk/www/charges.htm Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk 01634 717930 07850 597257 Just a tiny thing... the first hour says "inc travel" Does that mean you charge for the travelling time, or just for the time actually spent at the customer? (sorry to be a pedent, comes from having to interpret requirements docs.) cheers, The time actually spent at the customers. In the paragraph above it says "The first hour on site is charged at £45". Do you feel that clears it up? Or could you suggest some better wording? Open to ideas :-) -- Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk 01634 717930 07850 597257 |
#23
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Chip wrote:
On Thu, 17 Jan 2008 22:43:14 GMT,it is alleged that "The Medway Handyman" spake thusly in uk.d-i-y: Sorry if this annoys anyone, but I did head the post accordingly! I've decided to review my pricing structure, firstly to make it easier to communicate to customers and secondly to increase my margin. I'm constantly booked up for weeks ahead & the Fair Trader thing is generating extra business - I also feel it adds value to my services (I'm the only accredited handyman in the scheme). If anyone would care to comment I'd appreciate your thoughts. Off group if you prefer The charges are on my site http://www.medwayhandyman.co.uk/www/charges.htm Thanks in advance. The prices look very reasonable to me, the only comment I have from viewing that page is (unrelated to the prices): The logo at the top left takes a few seconds to load, even on broadband: if any of your customers are on dialup (a few might still be), the load time would be extreme, which might put them off, it may be better to resize it in photoshop or similar rather than using the browser to resize it. No problem at this end downloading the page. It is presented instantly. Dave Using bt openworld. |
#24
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On Sun, 20 Jan 2008 18:47:26 +0000, Dave wrote:
The logo at the top left takes a few seconds to load, even on broadband: No problem at this end downloading the page. It is presented instantly. Dave Using bt openworld. The logo image took a few seconds to be fully loaded over an average broadband connection. Not surprising as it it over 1/2 a Megabyte. For fun I resized it to 295 x 146 (same size as the one on the web page is scaled to) the resultant file is just 14 kilobytes and actually looks better )no jaggies) as the graphics package resize does a better job than the browsers on the fly rescaling. -- Cheers Dave. pam is missing e-mail |
#25
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Dave Liquorice wrote:
On Sun, 20 Jan 2008 18:47:26 +0000, Dave wrote: The logo at the top left takes a few seconds to load, even on broadband: No problem at this end downloading the page. It is presented instantly. Dave Using bt openworld. The logo image took a few seconds to be fully loaded over an average broadband connection. Not surprising as it it over 1/2 a Megabyte. For fun I resized it to 295 x 146 (same size as the one on the web page is scaled to) the resultant file is just 14 kilobytes and actually looks better )no jaggies) as the graphics package resize does a better job than the browsers on the fly rescaling. Point taken. Sorry to be dim, but how would I resize it? What software? -- Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk 01634 717930 07850 597257 |
#26
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"The Medway Handyman" wrote in message
.uk... Dave Liquorice wrote: On Sun, 20 Jan 2008 18:47:26 +0000, Dave wrote: The logo at the top left takes a few seconds to load, even on broadband: No problem at this end downloading the page. It is presented instantly. Dave Using bt openworld. The logo image took a few seconds to be fully loaded over an average broadband connection. Not surprising as it it over 1/2 a Megabyte. For fun I resized it to 295 x 146 (same size as the one on the web page is scaled to) the resultant file is just 14 kilobytes and actually looks better )no jaggies) as the graphics package resize does a better job than the browsers on the fly rescaling. Point taken. Sorry to be dim, but how would I resize it? What software? It's 80K on my machine. Ah, no, it's 80K on the main page, vis 0.5M on the "www" one. http://www.medwayhandyman.co.uk/www/charges.htm vs http://www.medwayhandyman.co.uk/charges.htm or http://www.medwayhandyman.co.uk/_bor...20logo%20c.jpg vs http://www.medwayhandyman.co.uk/www/...20logo%20c.jpg So you've already sorted it out, you just need to get rid of the "www" version. cheers, clive |
#27
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On Sun, 20 Jan 2008 21:30:17 -0000, Clive George wrote:
It's 80K on my machine. Ah, no, it's 80K on the main page, vis 0.5M on the "www" one. 80k is still a bit excessive for fairly small and simple image. It also still suffers the browser rescaling jaggies as the image is still 1560 x 748 pixels... Photoshop or Paint Shop Pro will do the resizing or any number of other probably freeware utilities out there. I'll see if I can demunge Dave's address and send him my rescaled 14kb version. On the charges look OK to me. Table is "complicated" for what is essentially saying £20/hr after the first hour with a £10 discount for an 8 hour pre-booked day. Why is there a back tick after the £125? -- Cheers Dave. pam is missing e-mail |
#28
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Dave Liquorice wrote:
On Sun, 20 Jan 2008 21:30:17 -0000, Clive George wrote: It's 80K on my machine. Ah, no, it's 80K on the main page, vis 0.5M on the "www" one. 80k is still a bit excessive for fairly small and simple image. It also still suffers the browser rescaling jaggies as the image is still 1560 x 748 pixels... Photoshop or Paint Shop Pro will do the resizing or any number of other probably freeware utilities out there. I'll see if I can demunge Dave's address and send him my rescaled 14kb version. And thank you very much Dave. I've changed the image. I appreciate your help. On the charges look OK to me. Table is "complicated" for what is essentially saying £20/hr after the first hour with a £10 discount for an 8 hour pre-booked day. Many people are simply bad at math :-) Its a summary for the hard of thinking. Why is there a back tick after the £125? No Idea - but its gone now! Once again, many thanks. -- Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk 01634 717930 07850 597257 |
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"Dave Liquorice" wrote in message
ll.net... On Sun, 20 Jan 2008 21:30:17 -0000, Clive George wrote: It's 80K on my machine. Ah, no, it's 80K on the main page, vis 0.5M on the "www" one. 80k is still a bit excessive for fairly small and simple image. It also still suffers the browser rescaling jaggies as the image is still 1560 x 748 pixels... 295 x 146 pixels here... cheers, clive |
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On Mon, 21 Jan 2008 00:19:48 -0000, Clive George wrote:
It also still suffers the browser rescaling jaggies as the image is still 1560 x 748 pixels... 295 x 146 pixels here... That is the size your browser is scaling the image to fit. I've sent David my small version which he now (1013) has online on both copies of his site(*). Curiously even this small image is being rescaled to 254 x 132 rather than leaving it at it's native 295 x 146 that was the orginal scaled size on his site. This produces some wobbles in the "straight" lines, looks like the artist had the shakes when they drew it. B-) -- Cheers Dave. pam is missing e-mail |
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In message et, Dave
Liquorice writes On Mon, 21 Jan 2008 00:19:48 -0000, Clive George wrote: It also still suffers the browser rescaling jaggies as the image is still 1560 x 748 pixels... 295 x 146 pixels here... That is the size your browser is scaling the image to fit. I've sent David my small version which he now (1013) has online on both copies of his site(*). Curiously even this small image is being rescaled to 254 x 132 rather than leaving it at it's native 295 x 146 that was the orginal scaled size on his site. This produces some wobbles in the "straight" lines, looks like the artist had the shakes when they drew it. B-) Nothing curious - the tag still reads img border="0" src="_borders/handyman%20logo%20c%20small.jpg" align="left" width="254" height="132"/p -- Si |
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On Mon, 21 Jan 2008 11:22:10 +0000, Si wrote:
Nothing curious - the tag still reads img border="0" src="_borders/handyman%20logo%20c%20small.jpg" align="left" width="254" height="132"/p Well yes. What is curious is why the image is being scaled at all. It doesn't need it. The image I sent was the same pixel size as the scaled, massive, one on the site. Scaling even the small version produces some artifacts. I forgot to ask why there are two copies of the site as well most peculiar and probably makes maintenace twice as hard as it should be and error prone. -- Cheers Dave. pam is missing e-mail |
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Dave Liquorice wrote:
On Mon, 21 Jan 2008 11:22:10 +0000, Si wrote: Nothing curious - the tag still reads img border="0" src="_borders/handyman%20logo%20c%20small.jpg" align="left" width="254" height="132"/p Well yes. What is curious is why the image is being scaled at all. It doesn't need it. The image I sent was the same pixel size as the scaled, massive, one on the site. Scaling even the small version produces some artifacts. I forgot to ask why there are two copies of the site as well most peculiar and probably makes maintenace twice as hard as it should be and error prone. Two copies? I know not of what you speak? -- Dave - The Confused Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk 01634 717930 07850 597257 |
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On Mon, 21 Jan 2008 18:14:21 GMT, The Medway Handyman wrote:
I forgot to ask why there are two copies of the site as well most peculiar and probably makes maintenace twice as hard as it should be and error prone. Two copies? I know not of what you speak? http://www.medwayhandyman.co.uk/charges.htm and http://www.medwayhandyman.co.uk/www/charges.htm Though depending on how your server is set up they may actually only be one copy but somewhere down this thread the logo was a different file between the two URLs. Which indicates they aren't a single copy with two URLs referencing it. -- Cheers Dave. pam is missing e-mail |
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Dave Liquorice wrote:
On Mon, 21 Jan 2008 18:14:21 GMT, The Medway Handyman wrote: I forgot to ask why there are two copies of the site as well most peculiar and probably makes maintenace twice as hard as it should be and error prone. Two copies? I know not of what you speak? http://www.medwayhandyman.co.uk/charges.htm and http://www.medwayhandyman.co.uk/www/charges.htm Though depending on how your server is set up they may actually only be one copy but somewhere down this thread the logo was a different file between the two URLs. Which indicates they aren't a single copy with two URLs referencing it. No idea what thats all about or how it happened. Does it matter? -- Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk 01634 717930 07850 597257 |
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On Mon, 21 Jan 2008 21:41:47 GMT, The Medway Handyman wrote:
No idea what thats all about or how it happened. Does it matter? Only if the serch engines find two sets of pages and you aren't keeping both sets up to date. Or if you are paying for disc space and have a duplicate set takes you into higher charges (unlikely). -- Cheers Dave. pam is missing e-mail |
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Dave Liquorice wrote:
On Mon, 21 Jan 2008 21:41:47 GMT, The Medway Handyman wrote: No idea what thats all about or how it happened. Does it matter? Only if the serch engines find two sets of pages and you aren't keeping both sets up to date. Or if you are paying for disc space and have a duplicate set takes you into higher charges (unlikely). I think I've got rid of it now :-) -- Dave - The Medway Handyman www.medwayhandyman.co.uk 01634 717930 07850 597257 |
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On Sun, 20 Jan 2008 22:46:28 +0000, Dave Liquorice wrote:
Photoshop or Paint Shop Pro will do the resizing or any number of other probably freeware utilities out there. Suggest the gimp for serious photoshop-level editing[1] and you can probably install ImageMagick on windoze, which gives you various commands (command-line not gui) such as 'convert' for doing various conversions and transformation on images, of which rescaling to a given size is but one. [1] the gimp is not a photoshop clone (although there's a plug-in for it which emulates some photoshop functions) but a powerful bitmap graphics editor in its own right -- John Stumbles Xenophobia? Sounds a bit foreign to me. |
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In message , John Stumbles
writes On Sun, 20 Jan 2008 22:46:28 +0000, Dave Liquorice wrote: Photoshop or Paint Shop Pro will do the resizing or any number of other probably freeware utilities out there. Suggest the gimp for serious photoshop-level editing One of the useful things PSP can do is selective cloning. The user selects a paintbrush (size/shape/density/opacity etc.) then right clicks an area in an image to select the source. Left clicking elsewhere then clones from one place to another with all the attributes previously selected. This useful for hiding minor blemishes in a textured area. I was unable to find this facility in the Gimp when I tried it. -- Si |
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Si wrote:
One of the useful things PSP can do is selective cloning. The user selects a paintbrush (size/shape/density/opacity etc.) then right clicks an area in an image to select the source. Left clicking elsewhere then clones from one place to another with all the attributes previously selected. This useful for hiding minor blemishes in a textured area. With suitable 'fractal' backgrounds such as lawn and Leylandii, it can hide blemishes the size of a garden shed. I was unable to find this facility in the Gimp when I tried it. Well, of course you couldn't. -- Ian White |
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