Submissions:

Do not miss this opportunity to have us all admire your photographs!
I shall be looking forward to them, particularly if picturing Androsace, Douglasia and Vitaliana species in the wild.     

The photographer stays fully protected by copyright. Kindly submit your own photographs only, never somebody else’s. The choice and inclusion of images, and the way they will be presented, stay the sole responsibility of the Webmaster. The site is non-profit making: there can be no financial deals with, or monetary benefits for photographers, as a consequence.
Any Androsace species may be pictured several times over, and some photographs may show the surrounding habitat.

How to submit your photographs:
Briefly notify the Webmaster indicating you are about to send in a mail with one or several attachments containing pictures, to prevent any misunderstandings that may occur (discarded or deleted files etc). 
Might I ask you to send photographs that are as large as possible, both in file-size and dimensions, in order to secure a basic quality photograph to start off with? 
Digital camera photographs should have a minimum of 1280 X 960 pixels. Use the top quality jpeg setting. Kindly not resort to compression programs.
A scanner simplifies the process: scan your negatives, slides or photographs at the recommended resolution, and send them to the Webmaster as an attachment to your covering email. I will make all the necessary adjustments on loading the file into the gallery.

Recommended scanner resolutions:

Prints are best scanned at 72 DPI minimum.
Slides should be scanned at 300 DPI minimum. 
Negatives at 300 DPI minimum. 

Always include the following information:

Your name
Your address
Your e-mail (and website) address
A heading for every photograph: full name of the pictured species 
Where and when the photograph was taken
If you want to appear as a link

Remember files, particularly larger ones, may take some time to send by email! If you have a file with a considerable amount of pictures, it may be best to split these up, sending one or two at the time, to better test the process. Or you may prefer to put your pictures on a compact disk and send it surface mail.

Any questions?

Hoping to hear from you soon!