Look at the actual file size of the photographs, which is different than the scaling size in your web site. You can have a 1.2 megabyte photo and scale it down, but it's still got a file size of 1.2 megabytes. You can see the sizes of your files by View>Folders. A large sized photo will also take longer to publish.
To bring the size down, you have to change the overall scaling size of the photo first. If you scanned in the photo as 8x10, that's part of the problem. You could reduce the quality, but the scaling size still takes up a lot of space. You'll need to bring it down to about 250 pixels on the shortest side of the photo (it seems small, but you'd be surprised at how big it actually is). You can save the photo of a quality of about 4, which should give you decent quality but not a big file size. Ideally, for fastest loading time, you want about 25KB.
To work with the photos on my site, I use Corel Photo Paint. This seems to be the only program that I've found that will bring the photo file size down to where it works for the Internet. However, if you have FrontPage, you do have an image program, Microsoft Image Composer (on the second CD ROM).
Linda Adams (Garridon@aol.com)
"Promoting Your Club Web site," published in The Toastmaster, June 2001