Our Work

We design, develop, and maintain websites. Whether you are starting from scratch or your website just needs facelift, we are here to help. We can build custom applications or integrate with existing processes to meet your business needs. Take a look at our recent work below. If you like what you see, contact us for an estimate.

Web Design: West Mane Salon

We were fortunate to partner up with Kelly at West Mane Salon in Forsyth, GA for a complete website redesign.  The website had gone through a couple different iterations and it was still cumbersome to update and really didn’t portray the look Kelly (owner) was going for.  Within two months, we re-transformed the website with a new design, took photos of the salon, and provided training so Kelly could update the site herself using a simple web-based administrative back-end.  Kelly and her team of hair stylists were a pleasure to work with through out the entire process.  If your website needs a pick-me-up, contact us today for an estimate.

Web Design: Our Town Church

Our Town Church Web DesignOur Town Church Web Design is a website design with a church in mind. Churches need the ability to reach out to the community around them. Websites that include the church’s beliefs, current events, schedules, and newsletters provide that ability. The church is able to utilize a web based application to quickly update the website to keep the community informed. If you would like more information about this web design, simply contact Adam Ham for an estimate. View Web Design »

More Design Ideas

Our Town Church Web Design Our Town Church Web Design Our Town Church Web Design

Digital Photo Restoration: Max and The Boys

Max and The Boys Digtal Photo RestorationThis photo was a challenge to restore. The photo was covered with scratches, creases, and tears. Using the Clone tool in GIMP, a popular photo editing software, I was able to remove the photo’s imperfections. The Clone tool in GIMP allows you to sample a specific portion in the photo and duplicate that portion elsewhere in the photo. You can simply think of it as a copy tool, copying portions of the photo from one place to another. I was able to take existing portions of the photo and copy them directly over the imperfections (scratches, creases, and tears). While the photo may not look exactly like it did in April of 1965, it is pretty close. If you would like your old photos restored to their original quality, contact Adam Ham for an estimate. View Restored Photo »

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About Adam

Adam Ham is a programmer at GPSTC during the day and proud father at night, but devotes his "off" time to build websites in the Middle Georgia area. Adam also specializes in photography; on-location portrait sessions are available. Find out more about Adam Ham.