Toni
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- Joined
- Aug 10, 2011
- Messages
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Pretty often, the webdesigner or anyone involved in planning a wedding will work specifically with certain vendors/photographers, etc. Even if the couple provides ALL their own photos independent of the web designer, there's still work to ensure that it's properly cropped to fit the space, has whatever filters it needs to present the look that the couple wants, etc. Same thing with whatever words the couple wants--and they may/may not be as articulate as they'd like. All those fancy things that the various links take you to? The web designer likely had a lot of input about how those were linked and what was linked, etc.I'm not talking a generic template, though, it'd be some sort of template regardless. I doubt anyone is creating websites from scratch. It'd be some sort of web developing software with tools.Nope. They are paying someone to create the vision for their wedding website for them. It isn't THEIR content. It's about THEIR WEDDING.Except as you note, the content would be whatever info they want (about them and their wedding) on the site. They are just paying someone to translate their content into HTML / *insert other acronyms and languages*.
What you are talking about is a cut and paste template. This is NOT THAT. No matter how many times you insist that it is. A template is generic and must be offered to all buyers. CREATING content for the buyer is different.
You are classifying the content as the website (or that is how I'm interpreting your claim). I'm classifying content based on the subject of the website.
Let's get to the tacks here. There is a portion of the website with pics. What exactly is the content the designer "created" or "expressed"? To me, the content the designer created is the coding to load up the pics and any manner of transitions between them. They didn't create the pictures (or the people in them). There is a link you can click and it sends you to the wedding registry. The designer created the link, not the registry. Another link takes you elsewhere on the website that shows the wedding location with a fancy transition. The transition is the designers doing, not the building the wedding held or the date it is held.
Sure, I'm certain that there are a lot of wedding website templates where the couple creates most of the content. My impression was that this was not one of those.