Image cloaking
Perhaps you want to read the surgery
tutorials, but you're not certain that you can stomach the intra-operative
photographs. You can use image cloaking.
Here's how it works. When you first
enter the tutorials, the introductory pages contain a check box that
allows you to turn image cloaking on or off. The check box looks
like this:
If you set cloaking to "on,"
you are free to explore the surgery tutorials with your queasy
stomach. Any photograph that you might not want to see will be
blanked out, as in this page excerpted from the rhinoplasty tutorial:
The light blue boxes above are intra-operative
photos that are cloaked. FacialSurgery.com knows which photos are
the "bad" ones, and selects them for cloaking.
If you want to see a cloaked photo, just
click on it, and it will appear. If you decide you would be better
off with the photo cloaked, click on it again, and it will
disappear. If you decide the photos aren't that bad after all,
scroll to the bottom of the page and use the check box to turn cloaking
"off."
Note: when cloaking is "off,"
clicking on a photograph in the surgery tutorials gives you a
greatly-enlarged view of that one photograph. However, when cloaking
is "on," clicking on a photo will only uncloak or cloak the
photo. Enlargements aren't available with cloaking set to
"on."
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