|
The world of non-commercial film and A-V making |
Events Diary | Search | ||
| The Film and Video Institute | | ||||
Pictures in WeeblyIn the article about Pictures we suggest how to choose and use pictures for your club website. Here's how Weebly handles pictures.
|
||||||||||||||||||||
In Weebly |
||||||||||||||||||||
| Weebly cannot crop, adjust contrast and colours. It has limited
powers to change the size that a picture is displayed.
The page elements which handle images are Paragraph with Picture, Picture (both in the Basic Tab) plus Photo Gallery and Slide Show (both in the Multi-Media Tab). We deal with the last two in a separate article here. Where to get a picture |
||||||||||||||||||||
| Weebly offers three choices: your computer, a free gallery
and the internet.
When you first drag a picture element onto the page you see: Click in the element and a dialog box with three tabs appears: |
![]() |
|||||||||||||||||||
| My Computer
|
You will normally use this one.
Click Choose File and browse your computer to find the right picture to upload. The image should be roughly the size you want to see on the website. |
|||||||||||||||||||
| Photo Gallery
|
This lets you search for a topic among the pictures listed as available
on the flickr website
under a Creative Commons Licence.
If the licence requires attribution (a credit to the picture maker) this is added automatically in a footnote. |
|||||||||||||||||||
| The Internet
|
In this tab you type in the URL (web address) of an image
you have identified on the internet.
If you see an interesting picture on a website, right-click on it and choose "View Image" or "Properties". The first shows the picture on its own. Look in the browser's address bar to see the image's URL . The second shows the URL and other information. In both cases you can copy the address to paste it into this box. Remember that most images are copyright and should only be used with the permission of the person who took them. |
|||||||||||||||||||
How to display a picture |
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Once in place on a picture element. the size at which an image is displayed
can be adjusted by dragging the red dot at its lower right corner.
The picture retains its aspect ratio. |
|||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||
| The Picture-Toolbar then offers:
|
||||||||||||||||||||
The Advanced options
offer:
|
Most of these are obvious but can help set off an image appropriately. Alt Text can be important. It is not normally seen, but on many browsers pointing the mouse at the image reveals the text. It is mainly used for browsers that do not show images. But it also gets picked up by search engines, so it is good to get into the habit of adding short, accurate descriptions. If you choose to put your club name/logo on a page, give the club name in this description area. Search engines cannot "read" the image but can read that. Adding the description also helps meet requirements of disability access legislation. |
|||||||||||||||||||
|
There are nine pages in this series of detailed Weebly tips: They support general articles on web design for film-making and AV club websites which begin here. [Weebly frequently update and improve their system. These pages are based on tests in November 2010.] |
||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
Page updated on
19 January 2011
|
| Company Limited by Guarantee No. 00269085. Registered Charity No. 260467. Authors' views are not necessarily those of the Institute of Amateur Cinematographers. Website hosted by Merula. JavaScripts by JavaScript Source. Menu by Live Web Institute. Art work by Miss Jo Black. |