First we have >![]()
That is a monotype corsiva D on a Pi symbol.
That I would like in some sort of greyish scale to use as a "repeat" backround image for other images. For this $2 - I require a copy of this
How should this be accomplished I need to know more, you are thinking yes?
So this this and this if you look at the backgrounds and the repeated image in the background this is what we want to use this for next
So the image 260 by 120 with a dark/black/nr black background containing previous "repeat" grey scale image is what is required next
For this $2 - I require a copy.Next looking at the three images marked "this" above we see words. The top words are in gold the hex number is #D9C264 the font used was Book Antiqua the words or numbers underneath the gold words are an off white
Reproduce these same images but with clearer crisper mirrored text.
Please note check here
Resize your browser so it is about 320 width and see how these images scale down when the browser is resized when on a page (you need to scroll down a little to see them on the page).I need the images to still look nice and have clear crisp text when such things (resizings) occur.
$1 each = 3 - I need a copy of each of theseTotal $7
I just need .png
I will own them fully.Payment by PayPal
Any questions?
Friday, October 18, 2013
Saturday, June 22, 2013
Home Page Images
Starts at just $1 per CPM or $0.10 per CPC.
Wednesday, June 19, 2013
5 small 80x80 images (I give input)
Friday, April 5, 2013
Nelson Mandela Photos: Benny Gool, Apartheid Photojournalist, Took Striking Images Of Madiba (PHOTOS)
For over three decades, photojournalist Benny Gool was afforded the rare opportunity to chronicle the career of Nelson Mandela. Working for The Cape Times, he captured both public and private moments of the first president of post-apartheid South Africa, collecting iconic photographs of the man many know as Madiba.
Gool's images are the subject of a new exhibit at New York's POP International Galleries, titled "MADIBA – Images of Nelson Mandela." Featuring portraits of Mandela's familiar smiling face, the show highlights everything from his momentous speeches to his celebrity encounters with icons like Michael Jackson and Princess Diana.
"MADIBA – Images of Nelson Mandela" goes on view at POP International Galleries in New York on February 13, 2013.
Scroll through a preview of the exhibit below and let us know how you are celebrating Black History Month in the comments section.

WORCESTER, SOUTH AFRICA: After his release from 27 years in prison Mr Mandela went out of his way to visit as many communities, across the length and breadth of the country, as possible. Here, he greets masses of people assembled on a football field in Worcester, about 100 miles from Cape Town.
President-elect Nelson Mandela at an election rally at Athlone Stadium just before South Africans of all races went to the polls for the first time in April 1994.
CAPE TOWN, SOUTH AFRICA: President Nelson Mandela on one of what must have amounted to hundreds of visits to crèches, to spend time with the children. This photograph was taken in Mitchell’s Plain.
CAPE TOWN, SOUTH AFRICA: King of Pop Michael Jackson visited President Nelson Mandela at his parliamentary office, Tuynhuis, on 23 March 1999.
MALMESBURY, SOUTH AFRICA - A smiling President Nelson Mandela at an event in the small town of Malmesbury, north of Cape Town.
CAPE TOWN, SOUTH AFRICA: ANC President Nelson Mandela, with regional leaders Reverend Alland Boesak and Mr Lerumo Kalako, on the campaign trail in Grassy Park ahead of the historic 1994 general election.
CAPE TOWN, SOUTH AFRICA - 20 March 1997: President Nelson Mandela re-visited Robben Island on 20 March 1997, stopping off at the infamous lime quarry where prisoners were forced to work.
Cape Town, South Africa: Mr Mandela participates in the voter registration drive, at Peninsula Technikon, ahead of South Africa’s second democratic election in 1999.
Related on HuffPost: Get AlertsWednesday, April 3, 2013
Can I Use Microsoft Office Clip Art and Stock Images Elsewhere?
One of the nice benefits of having Microsoft Office is that you get access to tons of royalty-free stock photographs, illustrations, animations and clip art to enhance your Word documents and PowerPoint presentations.
These images can be accessed directly from any of the Microsoft Office programs or you may download them online from the Microsoft Office website at office.com.
An oft-asked question is can you use these photos and clip art files outside Microsoft Office for a commercial or non-commercial project?
For instance, would it be legal to use the Office images on a public web page – say for the purpose of illustrating a blog post? Can you modify or annotate an image found on Office.com? Or can you use them in a printed technical manual or as the cover image of an ebook?
The Microsoft Office license agreement and the services agreement include details around legitimate usage:
You may not (i) sell, license, or distribute copies of the media elements by themselves or as a product if the primary value of the product is the media elements; (ii) grant your customers rights to further license or distribute the media elements; (iii) license or distribute for commercial purposes media elements that include the representation of identifiable individuals, governments, logos, trademarks, or emblems or use these types of images in ways that could imply an endorsement or association with your product, entity or activity; or (iv) create obscene works using the media elements.
The support site for Microsoft Office uses the phrase “unrestricted usage” and says that “you can use any image in the Office Clip Art and Media Library without restriction, except if the image becomes a product for sale.” The Clip Organizer manual requires that Microsoft Office users include a valid copyright notice on products that includes clip art and photos used from the Office Media library.
I am no legal expert but the language of these agreements does seem to indicate that you can use the Microsoft Office clip art and images for any purpose, including commercial projects, as long as you are not redistributing or reselling the clip art and image files as a stand-along product.
The online Office media gallery also sources images and clip art from external websites like iStockPhoto and Fotolia. The Office license may or may not cover the usage rights of these media files.
Also see: Can I use an Image from the Internet
Wednesday, March 6, 2013
Garry Winogrand's Photography Retrospective Brings 250,000 Unknown Images To SFMOMA (PHOTOS)
When street photographer Garry Winogrand passed away unexpectedly at 56 years old, he left behind approximately 250,000 images he'd never even seen. Because the extremely prolific photographer delayed editing his images, his oeuvre remained largely unexamined for years. For his first retrospective in 25 years, SFMOMA will present 300 photographs from the American icon, over 100 of which have never before been printed.
SFMOMA's assistant curator of photography Erin O'Toole explained in a statement:
"In the absence of explicit instructions from him regarding how he wanted his work to be handled after he was gone, its posthumous treatment has been the subject of ongoing debate and raises provocative questions about the creative process and its relationship to issues specific to the medium."
Winogrand, born in the Bronx in 1928, studied painting before turning to photography. The state of photography in America was somewhere between a budding artistic medium and journalistic technique, and Winogrand expressed American truths with a poetic eye. Whether capturing the overcrowded, amorphous New York streets or a lone sailor hitchhiking on the highway, Winogrand possessed an eye for that funny sense of isolation that lies beneath the American way.
With visual puns, odd personas and absurd juxtapositions, Winogrand turns ordinary American moments into extraordinary photographs. The photography addict insisted that "photography is not about the thing photographed. It is about how that thing looks photographed," an adage which proves true in his retrospective.
Whether in his native New York or Miami, Los Angeles, Albuquerque or Dallas, whether capturing clowns, construction workers, airports or beautiful women... Winogrand captured the complex fabric of American life, somewhere between ugliness and beauty.
Garry Winogrand will show at SFMOMA from March 9 until June 2, 2013 before travelling to Washington, D.C., New York, Paris, and Madrid. A catalogue of 400 images will accompany the exhibition. See a preview of Winogrand's extensive collection below:
Loading Slideshow
Garry Winogrand, New York, 1969; gelatin silver print; Collection SFMOMA, gift of Carla Emil and Rich Silverstein; © The Estate of Garry Winogrand, courtesy Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco
Garry Winogrand, Untitled, 1977; gelatin silver print; Collection SFMOMA, gift of Dr. Paul Getz; © The Estate of Garry Winogrand, courtesy Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco
Garry Winogrand, Sailor, 1950; gelatin silver print; Collection SFMOMA, fractional and promised gift of Carla Emil and Rich Silverstein; © The Estate of Garry Winogrand, courtesy Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco
Garry Winogrand, Los Angeles International Airport, 1964; gelatin silver print; Collection National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, Patrons’ Permanent Fund; © The Estate of Garry Winogrand, courtesy Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco
Garry Winogrand, New York World’s Fair, 1964; gelatin silver print; Collection SFMOMA, gift of Dr. L. F. Peede, Jr.; © The Estate of Garry Winogrand, courtesy Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco
Garry Winogrand, Los Angeles, 1964; gelatin silver print; collection SFMOMA, gift of Jeffrey Fraenkel; © The Estate of Garry Winogrand, courtesy Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco
Garry Winogrand, Coney Island, New York, ca. 1952; gelatin silver print; collection The Museum of Modern Art, New York, purchase and gift of Barbara Schwartz in memory of Eugene M. Schwartz; digital image © The Museum of Modern Art/ Licensed by SCALA / Art Resource, NY
Garry Winogrand, White Sands National Monument, New Mexico, 1964; gelatin silver print; collection of Randi and Bob Fisher; © The Estate of Garry Winogrand, courtesy Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco
Garry Winogrand, Albuquerque, 1957; gelatin silver print; The Museum of Modern Art, New York, purchase; © The Estate of Garry Winogrand, courtesy Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco
Garry Winogrand, Fort Worth, Texas, 1974–77. Gelatin silver print. Garry Winogrand Archive, Center for Creative Photography, University of Arizona; © The Estate of Garry Winogrand, courtesy Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco
Garry Winogrand, Park Avenue, New York, 1959; gelatin silver print; collection National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, Patrons' Permanent Fund; image courtesy National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC; © The Estate of Garry Winogrand, courtesy Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco
Garry Winogrand, John F. Kennedy International Airport, New York, 1968; gelatin silver print; collection of John and Lisa Pritzker; © The Estate of Garry Winogrand, courtesy Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco
Garry Winogrand, New York, ca. 1982–83; Gelatin silver print. Garry Winogrand Archive, Center for Creative Photography, University of Arizona; © The Estate of Garry Winogrand, courtesy Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco
Garry Winogrand, New York, ca. 1982–83; Gelatin silver print. Garry Winogrand Archive, Center for Creative Photography, University of Arizona; © The Estate of Garry Winogrand, courtesy Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco
Garry Winogrand, Los Angeles, ca.1980–83; gelatin silver print; Garry Winogrand Archive, Center for Creative Photography, University of Arizona; © The Estate of Garry Winogrand, courtesy Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco
Garry Winogrand, Los Angeles International Airport, 1964; gelatin silver print; Garry Winogrand Archive, Center for Creative Photography, University of Arizona; © The Estate of Garry Winogrand, courtesy Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco
Garry Winogrand, John F. Kennedy, Democratic National Convention, Los Angeles, 1960; posthumous digital reproduction from original negative; Garry Winogrand Archive, Center for Creative Photography, University of Arizona; © The Estate of Garry Winogrand, courtesy Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco
Garry Winogrand, Fort Worth, Texas, 1974; gelatin silver print; collection SFMOMA, Accessions Committee Fund: gift of Doris and Donald Fisher and Marion E. Greene; © The Estate of Garry Winogrand, courtesy Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco
Also on HuffPost: Get AlertsWednesday, February 27, 2013
Roberto Bernardi Hyperrealist Paintings: Amazing Still Lifes Of Chrome, Plastic, Candy (IMAGES)
Italian-born artist Roberto Bernardi describes his work as hyperrealism, a meticulous branch of painting closely related to photorealism.
Going by the examples available in his online gallery, Bernardi is an expert in painting still lifes of chrome, plastic, glass and candy -- glossy textured objects that generally don't lend themselves to being captured realistically in oil on canvas.
Ben Dahl of men's shopping blog Cool Material may have compared Bernardi to a "human Kodak camera," but in the age of Instagram, to be a mere collector of life scenes doesn't carry much weight. Consider all the similar scenes you may have browsed on your feed.
What makes Bernardi's work interesting is his ability to elevate the mundane to the fantastical through intricate attention to detail, giving "weight and depth to translucent objects, creating drama in the overlapping forms and infinite reflections that they create," as Cuded noted. There's no schmaltzy retro filter applied, just an exacting eye for the interplay between textures and colors.
But the physical presence of the objects is just part of the intrigue. The juxtaposition of clutter and order, the organic and inorganic, become comments on postmodern life and the technology that facilitates it.
A selection of images of Bernardi's work was posted to a Reddit forum devoted to photography Jan. 16. While the post was wrongly categorized, most users didn't seem to mind. Some inquired about the artist's method, and others commented on the historical context of hyperrealism.
"I guess the hyperrealistic movement, as it relies a lot on precision and control, it's just a product of technical improvements on the medium (besides the social critique aspect of it)," wrote user "howlinpete." "I have no doubt that painters from earlier centuries could accomplish the same results given the same tools (Vermeer comes to mind), but they hadn't."
Bernardi's paintings are currently on display as part of group exhibits around the world. In May 2013, he will exhibit new work in a solo exhibition at the Bernarducci Meisel Gallery in New York.
Click through the gallery (above) to view samples of Bernardi's extraordinary work.
Also on HuffPost:Tuesday, December 11, 2012
How to Search Google Images by the Exact Size
Google Images previously offered a useful “search by size” option to help you find images by their exact size (or resolution).
For instance, you could limit your search for landscape photographs to image files that were at least 10 Megapixels in size. Or, if you are were using Google Image search to find wallpapers for the desktop, you could specify the image resolution as 1920×1080 pixels and Google would only return large images with those exact dimensions.
The “exact size” search option is missing in the new Google Images but you can still limit your searches to a particular size by using the “imagesize” search operator in the query itself (see the above screenshot).
Enter the search terms as before and then add IMAGESIZE:WIDTHxHEIGHT to the query. Once you hit Enter, Google Images will remove the operator from the query but the results will only display images that match the specified size.
The search by size operators works on the mobile version of Google as well.
« Track the Browser Size with Google Analytics » How Many Windows 8 Apps are in the Windows Store?about the authorAmit Agarwal (@labnol) is a personal technology columnist and founder of Digital Inspiration, a widely-read tech and how-to blog since 2004. He also wrote this book. Email: amit@labnol.org Topicshow-to guides apple ipad adobe pdf google docs dropbox facebook twitter wordpress youtube google adsense india inc. screencasting software tips presentations gmail Evergreen11/01/2012The Best Apps for your Dropbox21/02/2012How to Migrate your Blog from WordPress.com to a Personal Domain05/05/2012Expand the Range of your Wireless Network with any Old Router10/02/2012Build a Wireless Home Network without a Router15/04/2010The Apple iPad: Hands-on Review30/05/2012The Best Google Chrome Extensions for YouTube Yes, No, Maybe? Conduct Opinion Polls Over Email using GmailGoogle Knol – Quick Start GuideFind if Anyone Else is Using your Dropbox AccountHow to Edit PDF Files without Adobe AcrobatWolfram Alpha Answers Queries That Google Can’tMaster your Web Browser’s Search BoxFAQTwitterNewsletterRSS© 2004-2012 Digital Inspiration.The content is copyrighted to Amit Agarwal and may not be reproduced on other websites.↑ Back to topView the Original article
Monday, December 10, 2012
Why Does Google Consider Some Images Malicious?
The other day I received an email from a webmaster whose site was blacklisted by Google. In Webmaster Tools, he found the following example of a malicious code detected on his site (domain changed):
So why did Google think this image tag was malicious? Can images be malicious? After all they are not scripts, iframes or embedded executable objects that that hackers use to attack web surfers.
It turns out, images can really make Google blacklist your site. In that particular case, the image was from a third party site and it was (as its name suggests) just an RSS icon. A normal legitimate file. The only problem was the third party site got hacked and attackers modified its .htaccess file to redirect search traffic to malicious sites (like here). Subsequently, that “example. net” got flagged by Google.
Sometimes it’s enough for your site just to load something from a blacklisted site to get a warning. For example, Google Chrome has so called “cross-site warnings“. When you open a website that is not currently blacklisted, Chrome can detect (in real time) that a page loads something (usually scripts or iframes) from a known blacklisted site. In this case you will see the infamous red malware warning. The only difference from a normal warning will be the words that “website at
These cross-site warning only (reliably) work in Google Chrome. And since websites that contain elements from malicious site are not blacklisted at the moment, there will be no malware warnings in Webmaster Tools (until Google discovers malware on your site). So the webmaster couldn’t find that code in Webmaster Tools if that was just a cross-site warning.
Broken links can be dangerous tooLet’s get back to that hacked site. It’s .htaccess file also contained rules to redirect all erroneous requests (e.g. requests with error codes 404 Not Found, 400 Bad Request, 401 Unauthorized, 403 Forbidden and 500 Internal Server Error ) to malicious sites. In our case, that rssicon.png file was missing for some reason, thus requests to this file returned the 404 error code and got redirected to a bad site.
So every time when someone loads a page with that img tag, behind the scenes, one browser request goes to a malicious site. This is probably what Google malware scanners detected and this was the reason for flagging that website with the rssicon.png img tag.
Images in third party widgetsAnother real world example is the current problem with Blogger blogs that use some fishy “page views counter widget” from bloggerwidgets .cz .cc. Google says, this site has infected 169 blogs.
All infected site has the following “counter widget” code
As you can see, this code loads an image from demo .bloggerwidgets .cz .cc. I guess it is supposed to display views count. However, the “bloggerwidgets .cz .cc” domain seems to be discontinued and now redirects all requests to a scam site.
Are those images malicious?Can those images from hacked/redirecting sites be really dangerous for visitors to a site that embeds the images via an tag? Well, I think such tags are “mostly harmless” ;) Modern browsers seem to correctly handle such redirections and simply don’t process server responses in unsupported formats (the malicious redirect returns some HTML code where an image is expected). But who knows, maybe some older browsers under certain conditions may misinterpret the scope of the redirection and navigate a browser to a bad site (after all this is what browser exploits are all about — they allow to do undocumented stuff).
Anyway, whats’ more important for webmasters is that image tags can really be the source of malware warnings.
So here are some basic tips on how to deal with such situations:
1. Where possible, don’t use images and other resources (e.g. scripts, objects, etc) from third-party sites. You might want to copy the files to your own server (if their license permits this).
2. If you have to embed resources from third party sites (counters, widgets, ads), check how trustworthy and reputable they are (e.g. compare Facebook widget and the “bloggerwidgets .cz .cc” widget).
3. If Google blacklists your site and mentions some tag as the source of the problem, you should remove that tag (or replace the image with some placeholder with similar dimensions to preserve page formatting) from all pages and then request a malware review via Google Webmaster Tools.
4. In case you don’t see any samples of malicious code in Webmaster Tools (for example, if you haven’t registered your site with Webmaster Tools yet) you might want to check Google’s Safe Browsing diagnostic page for your site:
http://www.google.com/safebrowsing/diagnostic?site=example.com
Just replace “example.com” with your site domain.
On the diagnostic page, check domains mentioned in the “What happened when Google visited this site?” section. If your site links to some images on those domains you need to remove them before requesting a malware review.
5. If you really want to use those images on your site, you should contact the owners of the sites they reside on and ask to clean them up and have Google unblock them. Once those third party websites are clean you can link to their images again.
Note, the above instructions only apply to situations when Google blacklists your site because of the tags that you added to your site yourself. If you find some image tags or other HTML code that don’t belong to your site and you never added them yourself, this will be a whole different story that requires different remediation steps (for example, the most important step will be to figure out how that alien code was injected into your web pages.)
Related posts:
Practical Guide to Dealing With Google’s Malware WarningsHtaccess Redirect to Example.ru/dir/index.phpReadable SafeBrowsing Add-on for Firefox 4+Introduction to Website Parasites If you need my help to resolve your site security issues, you can request it here.Tags: cross-site warning Google Chrome htaccess img redirects safe browsing Webmaster Tools « /tmp/wp_inc or Not Your Typical WordPress Attack Selected Tweets (Oct-Nov 2011) » Reader's Comments (2)
hi denis,
actually, malicious images loaded with the tag can be harmful. there has been several instances of security bugs in the processing of compressed images (e.g. jpeg) that were causing buffer overflow, thus allowing the mere display of a malicious image to cause some arbitrary code to be run on the client. the exact same type of bugs have also been exploited with music (i.e. playing an audio file would execute malicious code).
Good point!
While browsers can discard redirects of images to HTML pages (as in examples I wrote about in the post), there may be specifically crafted image files that exploit bug in browser software that renders images – one more reason to always update your browser.
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