"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).