Resize a Photo

This service is provided free of charge by www.ShrinkPictures.com. After you browse to find the photo and choose from the options below, you will be directed to ShrinkPictures.com to download your resized photo. Remember to scroll down on that page to find the photo.

The original image must not be larger than 5.5 megabytes.

1  Choose Picture or Photo to Shrink


2  Select New Maximum Image dimension
  760 Pixels 600 Pixels 350 Pixels 100 Pixels
  75% 50% 25%
  Custom maximum 1000px

3   Apply an image Special effect (Optional)
  Greyscale Sepia

4  Set resized image quality (jpg compression)
  Good Better Best

5 * be patient if original picture is large

Featured Volunteer:
February 2010
Ted Pankowski


Ted dates his passion for painting to reading Churchill’s essay Painting as a Pastime. Twenty years later, he found time to pick up a brush, yielding to a long dormant yearning. Like many members, Ted always thinks like an artist, seeing endless possibilities to paint. With various inspiring teachers, he has worked in oil, acrylic and watercolor and maintains affiliation with a variety of art organizations.

Based on his broad working experience, EAFA’s Grant and Organization Liaisons officer is well qualified for that eclectic job. Ranging from Congressional staff assistant to owner/ operator of a seafood restaurant to founder of community theater group and merchant seaman with the heart and eye of an artist, he has worked in a broad spectrum of jobs. The quality of his art work, proven by the number of shows in which he has been a winner plus his present activities, confirm his stature. Past President of EAFA, he now teaches at Art Umbrella, has published in Northlight Books and demos at Daniel Smith.


With all that going on in his life, I asked Ted what he did for fun. Along with walking two West Highland Terriers daily and being a father to a blended family with twin grandsons, he enjoys reading, history, movies, TV documentaries, and, of course, painting. As with his various careers, his subjects are landscapes, portraits, figures, whatever catches his eye. Ted is truly a renaissance man.