"dreamweaver"? five months? how about maintenance? how about revisions? how about security? a website needs constant attention … same as computers need constant attention. i think what you might prefer is a
"wysiwyg" website … batch a couple pics and some text and it's good to go. and there are plenty out there …vying for your wallet.
the plethora of
"drag-and-drop" website builders
(squarespace, weebly, wix, yodaddy) … some plans are free … some cost minimal amount … some are more expensive … depends on what the
"proprietor" desires … this is what five months can offer. and how secure are these partnerships? behind the front … do you really know who operates the schemes? some are hacked … six months ago there was a write-up
(arstechnica.com) of one such conglomerate which had been exploited …thousands of companies suffered because of one structural failure
(the main entity).
"dreamweaver" … takes five months to learn all the components within the program.
have yourself a go:
before closing … you might consider doing a few simple pages coding long-hand
(yes, using notepad). in this way, you become intimate with the languages
(html/css are only basics) involved. back in the day … after using notepad for 5-6 years … i installed
"arachnophilia" because it helped me catch my typos
(and other elements).