cross-posted from: https://lemmy.nz/post/2486194

Welcome to the first ever lemmy.nz photo challenge! Also the first time I’ve tried anything like this so bear with me while I make it up as I go along. With any luck I’ll find some prompts that’ll fit everyone but definitely chip in if you have ideas or have run forum challenges before.

Rules? Rules! (but not many)

  • It has to be a shot that you’ve taken yourself, I guess. There are posts all over the net sharing other peoples’ efforts but this is more about doing it yourself.
  • No NSFW, since that tends to open all sorts of issues around content control and this is meant to be a bit of fun.

Okay, we’re starting off with a cliche this week, because I’m all for easing into things:

#Prompt for 20/10: Spring

  • @DaveOPMA
    link
    38 months ago

    You can directly upload a photo if it’s less than 5MB if you use a lemmy.nz account. Other instances may have higher or lower limits, or may have even disabled uploads.

    The website has a button to add an image that triggers the upload, apps and alternate frontends may have different ways to do it.

    I’d say that’s your best bet as a starting point. Note that the only way to delete a photo is by using the button that appears when you first upload it. You can’t do it later (in an emergency I can remove images but it’s not exactly easy to do). So if you want that ability then that might play into your decision.

    Other options I have seen are catbox.moe for bigger photos, or uploading to pixelfed, a federated instagram alternative (e.g. at pixelfed.nz).

    • @NoRamyunForYou
      link
      28 months ago

      Sweet - Thank you for the detailed response :)

      And if I were to use something like Pixelfed, it would just be a text link to it? No way to have it embedded in the comment?

      • @DaveOPMA
        link
        2
        edit-2
        8 months ago

        I don’t think you can embed it in a fancy way, but if you copy the image URL (not the page link, but right click on the image and copy the image link) then you can use markdown to embed the image. It’s basically the same as a link but put ! in front, like so:

        ![alt text here - used for screen readers](https://pixelfed.nz/path/to/image.jpg)