Your photo is a vital part of your visa application. To learn more, review the information below on how to provide a suitable photo. Digital images are required for some visa categories, while photos are required for other visa categories. The acceptance of your digital image or photo is at the discretion of the U.S. embassy or consulate where you apply.
If you are applying for a nonimmigrant visa by filling out the DS-160 or DS-1648 online form, the form will instruct you to upload your digital image as part of completing the online visa application form. Review the Digital Image Requirements, which also provide additional requirements if you are scanning an existing photo.
Some embassies and consulates require visa applicants to bring one (1) photo, which meets requirements, to the interview. Review the embassy or consulate instructions where you will apply to learn more.
While we recommend you use a professional visa photo service to ensure your photo meets all the requirements, you may take the photo yourself. Photos must not be digitally enhanced or altered to change your appearance in any way. Please review the following technical requirements and references for guidance on taking your own photo.
Lay your baby on his or her back on a plain white or off-white sheet. This will ensure your baby's head is supported and provide a plain background for the photo. Make certain there are no shadows on your baby's face, especially if you take a picture from above with the baby lying down.
If your photo(s) or digital image does not reflect your current appearance, even if it is not older than 6 months, the U.S. embassy or consulate will request that you provide a new photo with your application.
Generally, if you can still be identified from the photo in your visa application, you will not need to submit a new photo. For example, growing a beard or coloring your hair would not generally be considered a significant change of appearance.
If the appearance of your child under the age of 16 has changed due to the normal aging process, he or she will generally not have to provide a new photo. However, the acceptance of your photo or digital image is at the discretion of the U.S. embassy or consulate where you apply.
Links to external websites are provided as a convenience and should not be construed as an endorsement by the U.S. Department of State of the views or products contained therein. If you wish to remain on travel.state.gov, click the "cancel" message.
When submitting your photo for the UVU ID Card, you must read and follow the guidelines found on the submission page. Any photos that do not meet the submission requirements will be denied and you will have to submit another photo.
Note: UVU Marketing ($75) and Campus Connection (free) are equipped to take photos that meet these standards. This photo will be used on your ID card and in various campus systems for UVU Identification.
Verify Identity Once you have submitted your photo, please review the acceptable forms of Identity verification. Then submit these documents online, or setup a meeting to do so in-person at our desk in the Sorensen Center. Proceed to the Acceptable forms of ID page once your photo has been submitted.
Photos for passports, identity cards and driving licences must meet certain requirements. There are rules about size, quality, background, facial appearance, position, expression, glasses, lighting and framing.
If you keep your head covered because of your religion or belief, then you may keep your head covering on for your photo. The head covering must be plain, in one colour only, and must also contrast with the background.
You may not be able to comply with all the requirements for physical or medical reasons. If it has any doubts, the organisation issuing the travel document or identity document has the right to ask you to provide a medical certificate as proof.
Apple reviews all photos before you can use them, and the review process can take up to 3 business days. These guidelines help ensure that photos you want to use are confirmed quickly. While they are in review, you can still add them to your Place Card or to a Showcase.
These should be specific to a single location and help instruct the customer about what to expect at this location, which could include exterior views, services or products provided, ambiance, and so on.
Photos are related to your company and must contain information about only the locations you own or have permission to manage. The following permission requirements must be met before an image can be used on Apple Business Connect:
Do not wear glasses in your photo unless you have to do so. If you must wear glasses, they cannot be sunglasses or tinted glasses, and you must make sure your eyes are not covered by the frames or any glare, reflection or shadow.
To complete your registration, you must provide a recent photo of yourself for identification and test security purposes. This photo will print on your ticket and on the score report that is automatically sent to your high school. ACT will retain the photo for a period of time consistent with active use of test scores and test security purposes, and use as described in the ACT Privacy Policy.
Your photo must be added by the photo upload deadline for your test date or your registration will be cancelled and you will NOT be admitted to test. You cannot print your ticket until the photo is added.
Students who wish to apply for an exception due to religious prohibitions should call ACT at 319.337.1270 to discuss their individual situation as early in the process as possible and no later than the regular registration deadline for their desired test date.
While you can upload your photo any time up to the deadline noted below, you are strongly encouraged to complete this part of your registration and print your ticket as soon as possible, to ensure everything is in order well before test day.
If you miss the deadline, your registration will be cancelled and you will NOT be admitted to test. If your registration is cancelled, the registration fee will not be refunded. You may, however, request a test date change, if you are not registered for standby.
In order to receive your Husky Card, a valid government issued photo ID such as a passport or license must be presented at the time of pick up. Please see below for a full list of acceptable identification:
During this period, all websites are in read-only mode, and site owners, administrators, editors, authors, contributors, and subscribers will be unable to log in or make edits. Visitors can still access and navigate sites as usual.
Please note when a nomination is submitted to the NPS, all photos (aside from historic images) must accurately reflect the current appearance of the property. Applicants should anticipate that new photos may be required near the end of the nomination process, especially if the nominated property has undergone any changes (through rehabilitation, partial demolition, or any other process) between the time of first submission to the THC and the submission of a final nomination to the NPS.
When shooting portraits, whether of people or animals, your subject should be the main focus of the picture and the best way to achieve this is to use a larger aperture. This will keep your subject sharp, while blurring out any distractions in the background.
If you want to get sharp photos in low light without raising the ISO too much, a tripod is an essential accessory. It will also allow you to experiment with long exposure photography, where you leave the shutter open for seconds or even minutes at a time, which can make for some amazing effects when photographing things like cityscapes or rivers and waterfalls.
When I found out my TCL Roku TV updated to OS 11, I immediately started trying out the Roku Photo Streams feature on my phone, but some of them were flagged as "inappropriate" when they certainly aren't (are bikinis really inappropriate?), and that I violated some "guidelines".
In that same error message is a link to a support article - - but at the time or writing, it just goes to the support home page with no mention of any guidelines anywhere on the site or any articles related to OS 11.
Certainly this has be an error. Can't imagine there are guidelines what you can place on your own screen. (although, I do believe a feature of the Photo Streams is supposed to be able to share with others, so maybe?)
I haven't received the Photo Streams feature so can't try it for you. Maybe someone with this feature can offer some guidance. Or maybe @RokuDanny-R , @RokuKariza-D , or @RokuMary-F can provide some insight.
If this turns out not to be an error and there are some limitations of "acceptable images" that you are allowed to use and see according to Roku, and you want to customize your screensaver, you can try Photoview for Google Photos. Basically any photo in your Google Photos can be used as a screensaver or multiple photos for a slideshow.
Even if it's not a bug....look, I get not wanting to have nudity or anything like that being shown. I totally get that, and it's not something I'm interested in doing. But the fact that Roku thinks they MIGHT be explicit, just because it shows a little too much....I think really should be addressed.
But perhaps what's more concerning is the guidelines not being visible anywhere. When you first set it up (which, by the way, you can do at ), nowhere does it mention any kind of guidelines. Not even at the bottom of the page (at least, not on iOS). It's only mentioned if a photo is flagged.
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