Go and sign up for an account at a picture-hosting site like Photobucket, download your photos off your desktop and re-size them. Then use the supplied direct links provided by the site to share your pics.
I asked the same question a while back. Check out the responses in the thread below. The best way that worked for me is to open them and edit the size in paint. Resize them to 25x25 and resave them this worked perfect for me.
I found some more old photos of my cars and I though I would share.
Taken in 1991 I think, Yokomo Works 91 I loved this car it evokes many memories, I will be using this snow paint scheme in the future on a number of my projects, it was fitted with...
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Nice to still have those photo's to share with us. 8)
Really nothing special here, but all these years later my wife came across these old pictures of mine. This car was my younger brothers that I built for him back then. Thinking back to when we built it I could have sworn it came with red logo wheels...
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At the time it would be weird maybe, but with benefit of hindsight now would be cool to have recevied a we're using up spare parts kit. AE did it too with the RC10's. If you had one today you could get everyone on FB arguing about it and then put it...
Anyone else have issues with loading photos from their iPad to photobucket? I recall having problems with trying to load photos to eBay too. Is this an iOS thing?
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If it says they are too large use a program like auto resize. Works great for me on iOS
I'm about to star a box art paint job on a new Junior 2 body.
I have photos of the box and issues of RCCA with advertisements of the car,but it's really tough for me to see if the car's blue paint is all blue,or if it has some black...
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Wow - how cool is that... the actual car!! :D
Looks like there is a darker blue 'fading' around the stripes - certainly a striking design 8)
I made this light box to start taking pictures of parts for upcoming sales.
here are a couple of sample pics
what material can I use over top to reduce glare?
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That definitely works great for filling in dark areas with light, but for tabletop photos, you can still get harsh edges on shadows, and funky reflections in glossy surfaces. Soft diffused light works the best for small stuff like this in a...
I visited the GYRC museum and shot a few pictures. I thought I had lost them, so they were never posted. Lucky us, I found them and posted them online here: