Top 5 Free Websites for Your Online Portfolio

Posted: Tuesday, October 6, 2009

portfolio-sites

Already collated your best works and want to showcase them online but don’t have your own website? You may want to check the following websites.

Being a part-time web instructor before, I advise my students to post their works online and to go the free route. I encourage them to make their collections of designs as mobile as possible since the subject required them to create a project with a client of their choice (pro-bono or paid)

Sure, they can get a web host and domain name for their portfolios, but being beginners and students, I want them to be as resourceful and intuitive as they can in using available tools online so here are some of the sites that offer free storage for your image works, some have a cap limit while others provide unlimited archiving.

Here are some free sites that can host your work for free!

sites-behance

Behance
Professional web portfolio site to showcase your work and connect to other designer (ala Linked-in)

sites-scrnshots

Scrnshots
Scrnshots just started last year (2008) and is growing. Upload unlimited web comps and screenshots from your desktop with the downloadable application.

sites-deviantart

DeviantArt
DeviantArt has been there for many years. They have one of the best creative communities on the web today. Post and receive helpful feedbacks from fellow artists.

sites-flickr

Flickr
Flickr has a very active community behind it. You can utilize the site’s Group section to show-off your work and let people leave their comment. Video uploading is also possible. I use Flickr’s note labeling feature to add comments/revision instructions to web comps. The Free Account can view 200 stored photos, after that you need to pay for the Pro account to see the rest of your uploaded photos.

sites-carbonmade

CarbonMade
CarbonMade is a paid portfolio storage website but they also have a free account which lets you upload and categorize your work. You can upload images, flash files and even video.

Why not print?

Although having print portfolio helps in presenting you as a very professional designer, students cannot afford to pay high-quality printing and binding services for multiple copies of their works.

The 5 disadvantages of having printed stuff as your portfolio:

  1. Expensive - not ideal for student to spend on yet being beginners
  2. Exposure - limited to those saw and received your printed portfolio.
  3. Static Medium - viewers can't interact with it (well, unless you have and thin OLED display there)
  4. Mobility - sure it's easy to bring a compilation of your work, but giving a link to your online work is easier
  5. Upgradability - hard to update as new works are created

blog comments powered by Disqus