You can select any image in your Photos app to send in an email. Open the Photos app and select the album that contains the image you want to send. If you took the photo with your iDevice, it will appear in the Camera Roll album. Tap the image to open it. This looks like a box with an arrow coming out of the top. The Share menu will open, and you can swipe through to add images. You can now swipe through your collection and attach additional pictures. You can select up to five images total. This will open a new mail message with the pictures attached. Enter in the recipient, subject, and any message you would like to include. You will need to have connected an email address to your Mail app. If you are trying to send a lot of images, you may run into the message size limit, which is usually around 20-25 Mb, depending on your mail service.  Tap the bar in the mail message that displays the size of the images. Select Small, Medium, Large, or Original Size. The combined file size for all of the images will be displayed for each option. Shrinking images will reduce the quality. If your recipient will be printing the images, send the original size. Tap Send to send your message. This may take a little while if you are sending a lot of images, but the send process will occur in the background.
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One-sentence summary -- Find an image that you want to email. Tap the "Share" button. Select additional pictures. Tap the "Mail" icon. Change the image size. Send the message.

Q: The table will help you approach the problem logically so that you can set up an equation. The rows will represent each ingredient in the mixture, plus the mixture. So, for a mixture of two ingredients, you need three rows. Label the first row for ingredient 1, the second row for ingredient 2, and the third row for the mixture.  For example, you might have a 20% saline solution, and a 15% saline solution. If you need to make 5 liters of an 18% saline solution, how many liters of each solution do you need to combine? For this problem you would label the three rows “20% solution,” “15% solution,” and “18% Mixture.” The first column will include values that represent the part of the total mixture or solution each ingredient is. Label the column “Amount” and fill in the cell for each ingredient. If the amount of each ingredient in the final mixture is unknown, use variables to represent these values. For example, if you are mixing saline solutions, you would label the column “Amount.” Since you don’t know how much of the 20% solution is in the final mixture, write the variable x{\displaystyle x} in this cell. Since you also don’t know how much of the 15% solution is in the final mixture, write the variable y{\displaystyle y} in this cell. Since you know that you need 5 liters of the final mixture, in this cell you will write 5. If you are completing a problem regarding diluted solutions, such as a saline solution, then this column will represent the percentage of saline in each unit of the ingredient. For example, you would label the second column “Percent Saline.” Since the first ingredient is 20% saline, in the first row you will write .20. Since the second solution is 15% saline, in the second row you will write .15. Since the final mixture needs to be 18% saline, in the third row you will write .18. If you are completing a problem regarding a diluted solution, then this column will represent the amount of the compound each ingredient adds to the total solution. To find the values for this column, multiply the first two values in each row. For example, you need x{\displaystyle x} amount of the first ingredient, which is 20% saline, in the third column the value for this ingredient is .20x{\displaystyle .20x}. Since you need y{\displaystyle y} amount of the second ingredient, which is 15% saline, in the third column the value for this ingredient is .15y{\displaystyle .15y}. For the total mixture, since you need 5 liters, and the salinity will be 18%, the value for the third column is (5)(.18)=.9{\displaystyle (5)(.18)=.9}, which means there is .9{\displaystyle .9} liters of saline in the final mixture.
A: Create a table with three rows and three columns. Label and fill in the first column. Label and complete the second column. Label and complete the third column.

Article: The simpler the image you use, the easier it will be to trace. Make sure the entire image is covered with the tracing paper.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Place a sheet of tracing paper over a drawing or image you want to trace.