Help:How do I insert a photo?
From ENHLDWiki
First, please make sure that you have reduced the size of your picture from what may be a huge original digital image size. Multi-megabyte images are just too big. Make it something like 400 to 600 pixels in the longest direction, ideally no more than maybe 200K.Then, click Upload file in the toolbox at the left of every page. You will see an intuitive dialog box system; click the browse button to navigate to the image on you own computer. It will offer to give the destination file (the one on the Wiki) the same name as the one on your computer, but you can change this if you wish.
Next, type some simple descriptive information and credit in the big Summary box, like "Metals Bank building shimmering in the twilight. Photo by Joe Blow." Then click Upload File. The image file is now on the Wiki server.
To make the image appear in an article, go to that article page and Edit it. In the edit box, at the place where you want the picture to appear, type something similar to this:
[[Image:301NCrystal.jpg|thumb|301 N. Crystal or some other caption]]
That adds the image named 301NCrystal.jpg, tells it to display it as a thumbnail, and tells it to add a caption saying "301 N. Crystal or some other caption". The vertical lines | between sections are pipes, the upper-case character above the backslash on most keyboards (looks like two vertical hyphens).
It is probably a good idea to usually display images as thumbnails, unless they are already pretty small, just for aesthetics of page appearance. Once your image is in the article as a thumbnail, if you click on it you will go to the image page where it can be seen at full size.
In practice, this procedure results in a display like that in the upper right of 301 N. Crystal on this page.
Historical Photos
The above applies to images to which you own copyright. Please do not upload other images, which includes any photo taken by someone else (unless they have given you permission - and in the long run, we will probably need to have that permission in writing), or found on the web. Virtually all images on the web are copyrighted, even if it does not say so; one exception is many of the images on Wikipedia, but even there you need to check out the exact license in effect for each image. Some will be available, some available with requirements, and some not available for us to use.
Historical images, such as those we may get from the Archives, World Museum of Mining, Montana Historical Society, and the like will very likely have some kind of use restrictions in addition to costs associated with them. Be certain that we can upload them to a public, digital location before you spend any of your own money on this. It is generally going to be moderately unlikely that museum owners of imagery will allow this use. But we can try.

