In regards to choosing the size of the font... so if "borrowing folks" don't loose the copyright in case the make it smaller,.. That is why I choose a font that is proportionate size to the photos and while maybe not so "subtle" it does not disappear when made smaller... In my case, if they make it smaller than to read the copyright they will also not be able to read the inscription on the tombstone in the photos and as to Cliff's java script to prohibit copy of a photo... 1. I use Mozilla browser and I have all javascript blocked, unless I hit and "allow" in an extension. so I was able to copy all his photos and then open Irfanview and hit "CTRL-V and that paste his pics in with no problem. 2. for folks who do not have that... all they have to do is hold down the shift key and hit the "print Screen" key on their keyboard... open Irfanview and then again hit "CTRL-V" and it pastes the whole page as seen on their screen. from there you drag your curser over the photo itself, to up to "edit" on Irfanview and hit "crop" and viola you have any photo that you can see on any webpage.... Here is page with links to some tombstone photos which I posted on the net which were submitted to me: http://www.rootsweb.com/~ohwyand2/w/st_mary_carey_a.htm You will see I tried to choose a font that was close to the size of the letters in the tombstone inscription. Kristina Kuhn Krumm Columbus, Ohio Webmaster for Wyandot County, Ohio genealogy
I recalled somebody in Pennsylvania had a very clever way to insert copyright in. - inside the carving, you can see it but can't remove it without ruining the photo. DAvid Kristina Kuhn Krumm wrote: > In regards to choosing the size of the font... > so if "borrowing folks" don't loose the copyright in case the make it > smaller,.. > > That is why I choose a font that is proportionate size to the photos > and while maybe not so "subtle" it does not disappear when made smaller... > > In my case, if they make it smaller than to read the copyright > they will also not be able to read the inscription on the tombstone in the > photos > > and as to Cliff's java script to prohibit copy of a photo... > 1. I use Mozilla browser and I have all javascript blocked, unless I hit and > "allow" in an extension. > so I was able to copy all his photos and then open Irfanview and hit "CTRL-V > and that paste > his pics in with no problem. > 2. for folks who do not have that... all they have to do is hold down the > shift key and hit the "print Screen" key on their keyboard... > open Irfanview and then again hit "CTRL-V" and it pastes the whole page as > seen on their screen. > from there you drag your curser over the photo itself, to up to "edit" on > Irfanview and hit "crop" > and viola you have any photo that you can see on any webpage.... > > Here is page with links to some tombstone photos which I posted on the net > which were submitted to me: > http://www.rootsweb.com/~ohwyand2/w/st_mary_carey_a.htm > > You will see I tried to choose a font that was close to the size of the > letters in the tombstone inscription. > > > Kristina Kuhn Krumm > Columbus, Ohio > Webmaster for Wyandot County, Ohio genealogy > > > ==== COPYRIGHT Mailing List ==== > RootsWeb's mailing lists are filtered and attachments are removed. A virus that is distributed as an attachment will not reach you through a RootsWeb mailing list. For further information about Viruses, Trojans, Worms etc., go please to: http://helpdesk.rootsweb.com/virus.html. Think to keep your Anti-Virus up-to-date! > > ============================== > Search the US Census Collection. Over 140 million records added in the > last 12 months. Largest online collection in the world. Learn more: http://www.ancestry.com/s13965/rd.ashx > > >