Can you control pinterest's “find image” results?

穿精又带淫゛_ 提交于 2019-12-03 11:04:18
austen

A lot of search results including the Pinterest Help Center talk about using nopin in HTML elements, which is invalid HTML. What they don't document is a data attribute to the same (well formed) effect.

<img src="foobar" data-pin-nopin="true" />

Mitali

Adding the nopin attribute will exclude the image from appearing on Pinterest:

<img src="..." nopin>
anthony

I solved this by simply loading the image before all others in the page. In this case, I gave it width="0" and height="0" (you could also give it style="position: absolute; left: -9999px; top: 0;" just to be sure).

This won't break the page layout, but will force Pinterest to find this image first. The only downside is that the browser will load the page a few milliseconds slower, but if you're reusing this image later in the page anyway, you should make up for lost time then.

  • Pinterest will find any images from <img> tags (it will ignore CSS background images) that are at least 80px x 80px.
  • The order the images show up on in the Pinterest list is determined by the order they are specified in the HTML.
  • As you have discovered, you can alter the CSS of an image to "hide it" without actually hiding it by either moving it off the page with absolute positioning or 0 height and width. Any images that are set to display: none will not be picked up by Pinterest.

You can instruct the share preview to only grab specific images from the page by using the “image_include” configuration option. First, set image_include to your desired class name (id selectors are not allowed, only class selectors), then add that same class name to each of the images on the page that should be grabbed. For image_include, don’t add the ‘.’ selector. Here’s an example:

<script type="text/javascript">
var addthis_config = {
image_include: "at_include"
}
</script>

Once image_include has been defined with a class, add that class to the desired images on the page. In this example, the only images on the page that will be grabbed, will be the images with the at_include class (img1.jpg and img3.jpg).

<img src="http://www.example.com/img1.jpg" class="at_include" />
<img src="http://www.example.com/img2.jpg" />
<img src="http://www.example.com/img3.jpg" class="at_include" />

I was reading this blog which suggests the following:

  1. Use the global no pin flag to prevent pinning on the whole site
  2. Manually add the Pin It widget to those images you want to make pin-able.

Given Pinterest's webmaster tools appear to only have a blacklist, rather than a whitelist option (that you are seeking), this could be a possible solution. Another stated benefit of this is you can also supply suggested pin text through the Pin It widget.

Only downside to this I guess is that it may break the user's own Pin tools. Pinterest does allow you to supply a custom "denied" message, so I guess you can say "please use our site's pin buttons directly".

I've tried this, and it works. It seems like a decent approach, at least until Pinterest sees fit to add some better tools, such as an image whitelist option. The main drawback is needing to add Pin-it buttons on every image you want to enable for your users & your users may be annoyed that they can't pin anything.

Unfortunately, there is no way to mark several images on your page as preferred, but you can mark one image to stay at the top of your images when someone pin it. Specify this meta-tag in <head>:

<meta property="og:image" content="http://YOUR-DOMAIN.com/IMAGE.jpg"/>

I have not found official confirmation for this feature, but it works great with addthis sharing plugin.

Add this script before the actual call to pinterest. And set images that you do not want to show with a class called 'nopin'

                <script type="text/javascript">
                var addthis_config =
                {
                    image_exclude:'nopin' 
                }
                </script>               
                        <div id="toolbox" class="addthis_toolbox addthis_default_style">
                        <a class="addthis_button_facebook_like" fb:like:layout="button_count"></a>
                        <a class="addthis_button_tweet"></a>
                        <a class="addthis_button_tumblr"></a>
                        <a class="addthis_button_pinterest"></a>                                                 
                    </div>
                </div>

If anyone is using AddThis, please check this thread: http://support.addthis.com/customer/portal/questions/1570789

AddThis has some, uh, unique functionality that affects the image picker presented. As in, when there is only one image on the page, it ignores the defined og:image.

If you set that lone image to be excluded, then the image picker won't show any images for selection.

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