When I worked at Hammond Communications Group as Lead Multimedia Developer, I took charge of designing their first web site. The site featured a number of categories for each type of service HCG provided, including video, 3D animation, and multimedia. Each category featured a few sample projects with images and downloadable video samples.

Received local ADDY award for Industry Self-Promotion in 1998.
 
 
Centennial Farms maintains partnerships which investment in thoroughbred race horses. While working for HCG, I built Centennial Farms first web presence. The site featured a main page with current news articles and subsections for details on currently open partnerships, stable stars, and company background. A members-only section, accessible via a password, held information on active partnerships.
 
   
 
This is the version of my personal portfolio site that preceded the one you are looking at now. The site was more minimalistic in design than this latest incarnation. It was frame-based and launched in a fixed size pop-up window.

Navigation was accomplished with some nifty DHTML popup menus that appeared when the mouse rolled-over the nav bar at the bottom of the page.
 
   
 
This was my first portfolio site after I graduated from college. Its age is apparent as soon as you read the posted warning that this "site uses javascript extensively" and for optimal viewing, you should download Internet Explorer 4 or Netscape 4 immediately! I think it still holds up rather well by today's standards considering it was designed long before the whole web boom began.

Clicking a category in the navigation sidebar expanded the section revealing thumbnails for my featured work. Inline GIFs were used to show animation sequences which eliminated video playback format problems; a hassle-free method I still in my current portfolio site. The red background elements were modeled 3D and rendered.

All that work and I only racked up a whopping 2,800-or-so hits. I bet that about 75% of those hits were of my own doing.