Don't have that many pics from that night, but I do have the before and after photos of your car bomb. Plus, I need a photo editing software - ahem - *nudge nudge* Either you, missfakeplastic, or Jed got the hookup.
Cool - I recommend Image Ready for the casual webphotoshopper. I'm sure Sara will give you the sweet hookup. :)
You may find this helpful:
I have some -general- (not hard and fast rules, by any stretch) web guidelines for all you guys, actually. (and please don't be insulted if you already knew this, DUH, Ericka, come get some HAM!)
1. Keep images less than 600px in width. This -usually- prevents the images from extending beyond the border of other people's browsers. You'll still have the fullsize original in case people request it.
2. Compression is your friend. Programs will usually allow you to preview the picture at diff. compression levels.. so you can see how small you can make the file without losing -too- much quality.
3. when you link the photos on a webpage, define the size. example: img width=600 height=400 alt=text_to_describe src=path_to_image This allows the rest of the web page to load while the image is downloading. The alt tag allows people to see a text prior to the image loading.
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I'm imagining Papi biting my ankles right now.
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Plus, I need a photo editing software - ahem - *nudge nudge* Either you, missfakeplastic, or Jed got the hookup.
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You may find this helpful:
I have some -general- (not hard and fast rules, by any stretch) web guidelines for all you guys, actually. (and please don't be insulted if you already knew this, DUH, Ericka, come get some HAM!)
1. Keep images less than 600px in width. This -usually- prevents the images from extending beyond the border of other people's browsers. You'll still have the fullsize original in case people request it.
2. Compression is your friend. Programs will usually allow you to preview the picture at diff. compression levels.. so you can see how small you can make the file without losing -too- much quality.
3. when you link the photos on a webpage, define the size.
example: img width=600 height=400 alt=text_to_describe src=path_to_image
This allows the rest of the web page to load while the image is downloading. The alt tag allows people to see a text prior to the image loading.
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Hope all is well for you and your man, and happy Friday!
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just added ya.
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