If after installing and correctly configuring Featured Content Gallery, a WordPress plugin by iePlexus “that creates an automated rotating image gallery of your posts or pages for use anywhere within your theme,” still the images do not display, chances are you have an active Lightbox 2 plugin installed in your WP site.
All you need to do is deactivate Lightbox 2 which has almost the same functionalities.
That was an experience I would like to share with you.






Experimenting with PicApp images in my blog
[picapp src="0/2/3/e/UCLA_Bruins_vs_356f.jpg?adImageId=5147881&imageId=6774884" width="500" height="333" /]
Embedding a PicApp image in a WordPress post is very easy. There are two embedding codes supplied. One is for self-hosted WordPress blogs. Another is for WordPress.com-hosted blogs like this one. To copy the code, highlight the whole code applicable to your site, and then paste it on where you want it to show in your post.
The image above is an example of a PicApp image embedded on this post using the codes supplied by PicApp for WordPress.com hosted blogs.
What if you do not want the thumbnails strip?
If you are not a great fan of thumbnails being displayed on the related-images strip, you can make them “disappear” by resizing the image. I did not even experiment with this one. The information was already supplied in WordPress.com’s support forum. Well, not exactly the way I wrote it here. But it was pretty obvious from the WordPress.com’s support page that that was how it could be done.
Below is a sample image grab where the related-images strip is removed and replaced by a PicApp-linked “Gallery” icon when the image is reduced. I reduced the image size by 50% of its original size.
[picapp src="0/2/3/e/UCLA_Bruins_vs_356f.jpg?adImageId=5147881&imageId=6774884" width="250" height="167" alt="test image" border="0"/]
How do you wrap the text around the resized and smaller image?
I admit I am no expert in CSS. But what I normally use – a simple stylesheet – to align an image left or right works.
On this example, I used a stylesheet with the image being floated to the left and with a margin to the right of the image of 10px to make way for a nice whitespace between the image and text left margin.
I am pretty sure there are other ways of wrapping the text around the image or aligning the image left or right of your post.
Will I be using PicApp images in my blog? When pressed for time or I don’t have the right photographs in my library, why not? After all, the images are free, are they not?
Well, not exactly free like in free to do what you want with them. What is “free” is free access. We still have to “pay” for them, I suppose, by way of the traffic redirected to PicApp’s where advertisements are displayed or the viral marketing effect we create for PicApp by making the embedding code of the images available in our blogs for others to use.
To me, that is a very small price to pay, especially in these days of sharing and bookmarking.