User:Lhavelund/Image guidelines
For a technical guide on uploading and displaying images, see Help:Images.
For image licensing and copyright, see Team Fortress Wiki:Licensing images.
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General guidelines
- Images used on the wiki should be uploaded to the wiki using the upload page. This is to avoid a number of things:
- Stealing bandwidth from other sources, and
- Ensuring the image links are more reliable, as they are under our control.
- The Official Team Fortress Wiki is not an image hosting service, and any images uploaded to the wiki should solely be for use on the wiki, not your personal website or any other places.
Source, author and copyright information
- Each image on the wiki has a corresponding description page. On that page, you should document the copyright status of the image by selecting one of the pre-defined licenses. Unlicensed images will be subject to deletion. Please see the licensing help page for more information on the correct license to choose when uploading images.
- You should add the source and, if known the author of an image in the summary section when uploading, or use the
{{Information}}
template. - Fan art images should always be marked as such, especially when used in an article, and they should not take precedence over official artwork.
Naming
- Use descriptive titles. Suffix the filename with the content description. For example, acceptable filenames would be "File:2fort map.jpg" or "File:Unusual mullet green confetti.png". File names such as "File:lolhat.jpg" or "File:myfavouriteloadout.png" are not descriptive, and will be subject to deletion.
- Lowercase file extensions should be used for uniformity (ie .jpg rather than .JPG).
- Avoid uploading images of the same subjects under different names. It is better to overwrite an existing image with a better one than to upload it to a new name (unless the current name is not descriptive enough, or the file is using a different format). Images can be reverted back to previous versions if newer ones are deemed to not be improvements.
- Names are case sensitive—this means "Filename.JPG" is considered a different file from "Filename.jpg".
- Use of underscores in image names is unnecessary as spaces in file names will be replaced with underscores.
[[File:John Doe.jpg]]
is the same as[[File:John_Doe.jpg]]
.
Categorisation
- Icons should be placed in one or more sub categories of Category:Icon images.
- Screenshots should be placed in one or more sub categories of Category:Screenshot images (this will be automatic if you use the
{{ScreenshotTF2}}
template).
Image formats
Currently png, gif, and jpeg image formats are allowed. All of these formats have different uses, and should generally be used for different types of images.
- png should be the primary file format for icons, low-colour illustrations (signs, icons, etc.) and similar images.
- jpg should be the primary file format for screenshots and pictures.
- gif should only be used for animated graphics, or when the original source is a gif image.
Design and Quality
Image size
- Although files up to 16 megabytes can be uploaded, there is no need for any image to be that large. As a guideline, images should be no larger than 500kb.
- Larger images may be difficult for some users to download or view so it is recommended that you crop images to focus on their subject.
Compression levels
- JPG - Compression levels of 80-85% normally do the job. In no case should you ever have to go above 90%; the minimal increase in image quality does not outweigh the increased file size.
- PNG - Reducing the number of unique colors in the picture will make PNG files much smaller.
- Optimization programs can be used to reduce file size, consider using something like RIOT if you have Windows or PunyPNG for an online tool - both of which handle JPEG, GIF and PNG.
Resolution
- Crop non-landscape images to show the important areas.
- Do not upload huge images—try to keep to a width of around 1280 (1280x1024 XSGA for 5:4 aspect ratio, 1280x960 for 4:3, or 1280x720 WXGA for 16:9).
- Do not blow up small images to larger sizes without good reason, this can detract from the overall quality.
- It is not recommended to resize images in an editing program, as MediaWiki can scale images automatically. Uploading a larger image that is cropped neatly means that higher amounts of detail can be seen if necessary.
Transparency
- Images that require transparency should use the PNG file format. GIFs may also handle transparency, but only in a single indexed color as they only support 256 colors and do not have alpha channel support. This means they do not allow anti-aliasing of edges or blended color layers.
Image linking
- Inline linking (also known as hotlinking) or external linking of images on external sites for display on Team Fortress Wiki should not be used. There are multiple reasons for this including bandwidth leeching, copyright, ownership and availability issues.
See also
- Help:Images - Help article on using images
- Help:Taking Screenshots - Guide to taking screenshots
Comments
Place any comments here. ~ lhavelund
(t ▪ c) 18:59, 16 October 2010 (UTC)
Old page
General guidelines
- Almost all images for use on the wiki should be uploaded using the upload page. That way we don't steal bandwidth from others, and it makes the image links more reliable.
- Team Fortress Wiki is not an image hosting service. Any images uploaded should be for sole use on Team Fortress Wiki.
Image sourcing
Please see Team Fortress Wiki:Licensing images for more information on the correct license to choose when uploading images.
Source, author and copyright information
- Each image on the wiki has a corresponding description page. On that page, you should document the copyright status of the image by selecting one of the pre-defined licenses. Unlicensed images will be subject to deletion.
- You should add the source and, if known the author of an image in the summary section when uploading, or use the
{{Information}}
template. - Fan art images should always be marked as such, especially when used in an article, and they should not take precedence over official artwork.
Naming
- Use descriptive titles. Suffix the filename with the content description. For example acceptable map names would be "File:2fort map.jpg" or "File::Dustbowl map.jpg".
- Lowercase file extensions should be used for uniformity (ie .jpg rather than .JPG).
- Avoid uploading images of the same subjects under different names. It is better to overwrite an existing image with a better one than to upload it to a new name (unless the current name is not descriptive enough). Images can be reverted back to previous versions if newer ones are deemed to not be improvements.
- Names are case sensitive so Filename.JPG is considered a different file from Filename.jpg.
- Use of underscores in image names is unnecessary as spaces in file names will be replaced with underscores.
[[Image:John Doe.jpg]]
is the same as[[Image:John_Doe.jpg]]
.
Image formats
Currently PNG, GIF, and JPG image formats are allowed.
Screenshots
- JPG format should be used for screen captures as their compression rates are good in relation to image quality.
- Categorize your uploaded screenshots in one or more sub categories of Category:Screenshot images (this will be automatic if you use the
{{ScreenshotTF2}}
template).
Icons
- PNG format should be used for icons.
- Categorize your uploaded icons in one or more sub categories of Category:Icon images
Design and Quality
Image size
- Although files up to 16 megabytes can be uploaded, there is no need for any image to be that large. As a guideline, images should be no larger than 500kb.
- Larger images may be difficult for some users to download or view so it is recommended that you crop images to focus on their subject.
Compression levels
- JPG - Compression levels of 80-85% normally do the job. In no case should you ever have to go above 90%; the minimal increase in image quality does not outweigh the increased file size.
- PNG - Reducing the number of unique colors in the picture will make PNG files much smaller.
- Optimization programs can be used to reduce file size, consider using something like RIOT if you have Windows or PunyPNG for an online tool - both of which handle JPEG, GIF and PNG.
Resolution
- Crop non-landscape images to show the important areas.
- Do not upload huge images - try to keep to a width of around 1280 (1280x1024 XSGA for 5:4 aspect ratio, 1280x960 for 4:3, or 1280x720 WXGA for 16:9 ).
- Do not blow up small images to larger sizes without good reason, this can detract from the overall quality.
- It is not recommended to resize images in an editing program, as MediaWiki can scale images automatically. Uploading a larger image that is cropped neatly means that higher amounts of detail can be seen if necessary.
Transparency
- Images that require transparency should use the PNG file format. GIFs may also handle transparency, but only in a single indexed color as they only support 256 colors and do not have alpha channel support. This means they do not allow anti-aliasing of edges or blended color layers.
Image linking
- Inline linking (also known as hotlinking) or external linking of images on external sites for display on Team Fortress Wiki should not be used. There are multiple reasons for this including bandwidth leeching, copyright, ownership and availability issues.
See also
- Help:Images - Help article on using images
- Help:Taking Screenshots - Guide to taking screenshots