Structure of My Online Doco
After changing the contents and organising the order of webpages, I’ve finally decided how my online doco will be looked like, regarding its graphic style and structure/page format.
First of all, since the topic of my doco is about lomo cameras, I’d like to follow the unique graphic style which lomography has - colorful, vivid, relaxing and fun. By Using ‘Photoshop’, I would be able to manipulate "lomo" style in a digital form. Secondly, the structure of my website will be divided into three parts, but each of them would have some pages linked to each other in order to create a more integrated interface. Here are the three areas for my doco:

This is a section where the history of lomography is going to appeal. For people who have no idea about what ‘LOMO’ or ‘Lomography’ is, it is essential to give them a brief introduction regarding lomography.
Furthermore, I will give examples about the functionality within different lomo cameras. From here, the browser can take a further step to the lomo users in ‘LOMO Who’ section.

Community is the theme here. For lomo community. it exists both online and offline. LOMO Homes under lomo’s official website and lomo pools in Flickr are probably the strongest online communities acting internationally.
Like in one of Jenny’s lectures, LOMO Home is a perfect example of the notion ‘ Technosocial communities: prosumers, professionals and metadesign".
The offline community is hard to find as I am new to Melbourne, so I took a chance pumping to the shops where they sell lomo cameras and see whether if I could get some information. Fortunately, the staff in Genki is extremely friendly and allowed me to record an interview from her.

This section may be the fun part for readers, no matter you are a lomographer or not!
For my curiosity and for the doco, I did search the lomo community in Melbourne. Having going through the lomo shops and looking for lomo people in Melbourne, I got some positive feedbacks. Therefore, this section is about the interviews and photos from lomo users from Melbourne and Tokyo, Japan. Some pages will have links to ‘LOMO Where’.



