At 09:31 AM 4/18/2012, Jenny Calvin wrote: >I am thinking in the long term with the things that I put on my website >(mostly old photos and documents that I have been able to scan) -- I want >them to be accessible to people fifty years from now, after I'm long gone. >I have reduced the size of my website pictures to make them load more >conveniently, but those are not printable quality. I would like for people >to be able to download a full-quality picture if they want to print it. Is >that acceptable to do? I know Freepages are not to be used for "photo >storage" but I assume that means pictures of my Christmas party and my >pets, not 1800's pictures of ancestors. Is that correct? Pretty much. Freepages space may not be used for personal photo albums like your Christmas Party, pets, etc. The "do not use for storage" prohibition applies to files that are not web pages or a component thereof. Extremely large photo/image files are not easily displayed on a web page because of download times. However, you can link an image displayed on a web page to a larger file for printing. The code would be <.a href="http://URI-of-photo-for-printing.jpg"><.img src="display-size-photo.jpg"><./a> Remove the leading dots when coding your web page. They are used here.to prevent the code from executing in this e-mail. Pat Asher