Relationships
Dear Community,
Our tech team has launched updates to The Nest today. As a result of these updates, members of the Nest Community will need to change their password in order to continue participating in the community. In addition, The Nest community member's avatars will be replaced with generic default avatars. If you wish to revert to your original avatar, you will need to re-upload it via The Nest.
If you have questions about this, please email help@theknot.com.
Thank you.
Note: This only affects The Nest's community members and will not affect members on The Bump or The Knot.
Web/graphic design people
If you created an image to be inserted as a link into a webpage, you'd probably send the file as a jpg, right? Not a pdf?
I'm so frustrated with this dude and now I have to call him again. GRRRR.
Re: Web/graphic design people
You mean you want the image to appear ON the website? Right? Then, yes I'd use a jpeg or a png also would work well.
If you mean there's a link on the website and it LEADS to the image, well then it can be anything. A pdf would be good if there is a lot of text. It would stay crisper than a jpeg. (I hate when clients are confusing about this kinda stuff, cause it does get confusing.) Good luck!
I think she was saying she wanted to use the image as the link which would mean jpeg or png, but yeah, if you're wanting a link to open the file a pdf could be better resolution*
*assuming it's a pdf made from a vector file because nothing irks me more than someone handing me a pdf made from a bitmap file and thinking I'm going to be able to magically make it scale with no pixelation.
It is an image that will used on the webpage to link elsewhere. So, a pdf is worthless.