5/2/2023 0 Comments Sharper image isplashIf you recall, I resized my image to 1,000 px wide yet my post is only 800 px wide. The next box is all about what you want your image to look like in the post and what people can do with it. Google pays attention to the image title and description for SEO purposes so it’s a good place to responsibly use your keywords. I generally don’t but I did for the Before / After size comparison image above. If you want, you can use the caption box as well. I generally will copy that and paste the same thing into the Alt Text box and Description box. You’ll see the title we renamed the image shows up in the “Title” box. I’ll explain each of those from the top down. When you start the upload there will be a few boxes we’re going to want to fill in. You might not have any of the other buttons next to it, but you will have that Add Media Button. It’s kind of meta to do this but it’s right here… Put your cursor where you want it to go in the post and click the “Add Media” button at the top bar. While that’s a horribly long name, I want better SEO for this post. Really! Why you ask? Because Google looks at a few things in images in how it ranks things. While Unsplash named it the way they wanted – we can easily rename it to whatever makes better sense. Images from my camera might be named something like img1234.jpg – that’s not very good for SEO. Next thing I’m going to do is rename the image. It’s a much smaller file but large enough to show well in a post. In Preview here’s what that looks like and note the change in file size! Before / After If you are on a PC – I suggest you download something like Irfanview. NOTE: I’m on my Mac so I’m simply going to use Preview. All those extra pixels are going to be wasted. The blog post you are reading this in is only 800px wide. This image I’m using is 5,000+ pixels wide and 2.1 Mb. jpg and so it has a good amount of compression it’s still going to be huuuuuuge in file size as well as pixels. The image you just downloaded is full size. Yeah, I did that in BOLD because it’s so important. You’ll note that the image names are usually the Photographers name and a few numbers. When you do, you’ll start the download dialogue. There’s links and buttons in each of the corners but for now we’ll pay attention to the upper right. That sounds simple enough right? When you do, you’ll see full sized version of the image you like. With that search I can now start scrolling to find the one that works best for me. For this example I’m going to search for… That might be directly, or it might be in a cute way. I like using an image that relates to the post in some way. I always head straight to the search bar at the top. With over 200,000 images, scrolling doesn’t work for me. If you don’t, there’s a little toggle on the right side.įrom here you can start scrolling to find something that works for you. Head on over to and you might see a grid of the most current images. □ While images are important for readability, large image files can bog down the loading times for pages. Hopefully it’s a site that was properly built so that it loads fast (like the one’s I build). Ok, so first… I assume you are using WordPress. In this post I’m going to show you how to use an image from and do it right. It’s free and all the images are yours to “ legally” do whatever you want with. Unsplash is a great place to find images for your blog posts and pages.
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