Lets face it, you didn't want feedback, because this website was "exactly the way you wanted it."
Yes and No.
I wasn't planning on even changing anything on the website because of others thoughts. I intended to make it so.
I wanted feedback just only to know how people think about it, how they feel when they're navigating, what it does to them.
Besides, it's not because a few people don't like it, that everyone dislikes it.
Someone else already said: "I like it; it's simple, clean, informative and straight-forward. Well done."
But that doesn't mean that everybode thinks that way neither.
If you wanted feedback, you'd actually listen to what people were saying in regards to the pile of code you promote as a website. This is the most frustrating thing for me, as someone who tried to give your website honest feedback, and spent time on it trying to use it.
You have to know I really appreciate your efforts because it's the only way I get a honest feedback.
I've seen a LOT of websites, and there are things that just "work" and every website should have. Like a nav bar, like maximized screen real estate, like fonts that are readable up close and for extended periods. It's all up to how you style those elements. If you want your site to be used by people other than yourself, these are things you NEED to consider. You have less than 5 seconds to grab the attention of a viewer, your five seconds was technically up before I figured out what to do to see your work. If it were a website I was browsing on a whim, it would have been closed immediately and shunned into oblivion. You are essentially setting your website up to fail.
That was the purpose... maybe you're still not getting it from my explaination before.
I know all that. I've seen a LOT of websites too, maybe too much. I'm on web'design' forums for years now, too.
I've already made plenty of websites. I know about usability and readability and what a navbar is intended for and that you have less than 5 seconds etc... I know about marketing too, as I made projects for businesses too.
I came from a website that was perfect made for visitors like you as you discribed, for a large audience.
But now I don't need it anymore. I'm done with webdesign lately. It frustrates me that it's getting a more boring business than before.
All websites look the same.
I'm kind of nostalgic to the websites I saw when I was younger, 18 years ago. Old style, but original. Wrong purposes.
As I became a dad, I have less time for that. I still have plenty of other hobbies I want to fulfill like bicycling, basketball, playing guitar, going out with friends, travelling,... Still, I have a fulltime job AND am a dad. I chose to let go one of my hobbies: webdesign. I'm not going further in that. I don't need marketing, a target audience, tons of visitors to get publicity money, selling nothing.
But I still wanted some of my series of photos online, to show friends and family. Still wanted my coding stuff online for others to download. And still wanted some space of myself, in my own user-unfriendly design that I always wanted. It does not need to work for 'mainstream' as I don't use it as a visit card to show for a job offer.
But then again, I was curious to know what others thought about it.
I'm with Tyler on this, you really need to start over IMO...there are way too many things I don't like here. It looks like something I used to see many years back here in US. Or it could be a country thing: looks like you're from near Brussels, may be the sites you have there are different than those here in US. If you plan on serving US visitors, I'd say change.
Totally not a country thing. I just wanted to get this different from all other websites that look the same. My intention is succeeded.
I plan visitors from everywhere, aswel people from Brussels will think this site is odd.
And for me it's a plus that a website is sometimes a Zelda Quest to find out what it's meant for. Hide the obvious please.