KeepandShare's editor is quite powerful in its ability to embed and handle images such as photos or bitmaps. Images can be inserted into your document with just a few clicks. Inserted by itself, the image is treated as if it were a 'big character', so you control its positioning by inserting Carriage Returns (the 'Enter' key) before and after it, and spaces and tabs to its left and right, or using formatting commands such as Center Alignment.
To insert an image or photo you must first have uploaded the photo's file into KeepandShare or another photo-hosting website. The photo files must be in one of .JPG, .GIF or .PNG formats (KeepandShare does not support any other graphics formats).
Upload to KeepandShare by selecting the gray Photo tab and either the Upload Photos or Edit & Upload commands.
Then open your document in the editor (by clicking on "Edit" next to the document's name), click on the location you want the photo inserted, and choose the Insert Photo icon:
, which brings up this dialog:

If your photo is stored on another photo-hosting website, type the URL for your photo into the top field and click on the "Insert Now" button:
If your photo is stored in KeepandShare, click on a photo roll's green name:

The photos for one photo roll are displayed whenever you click on the green photo roll names:

When you click on an actual photo it is immediately inserted into your document.
Once an image is inserted, you can resize a it by clicking anywhere on the image, which causes the image to be outlined with resize handles at the corners. Click and drag any of the corners to resize the image.
Images can also be copied or cut to the clipboard to be duplicated elsewhere by using standard clipboard commands such as Ctrl-C and Ctrl-X.
If you want your images to appear one above the other, simply insert a carriage-return after each image by pressing the Enter key. If you'd like them to be side-by-side, don't insert CR's, but you might want to put 1 or 2 spaces in between each image.
If you'd like more layout flexibility, consider using a 'table' in your document and arranging images and text within the tables cells. The editor has a Insert Table icon that creates tables for you. They're a great way to get side-by-side layouts of information.