Tags
- 4 wheeling
- abraham linclon
- amhearst pheasant
- autumn
- bass
- bright angel
- brown
- brown trout
- bull trout
- california
- canvas back
- canyon
- canyons
- catcus
- cedar breaks
- christmas lights
- colored leaves
- couples
- cutthroat
- dgital camera
- digital camera
- digital images
- duck hunting
- ducks
- etc.
- fish
- fishing
- flies
- flowers
- fly
- fly fishing
- fly patterns
- fly tying
- flys
- flytying
- forest
- formations
- game birds
- geological
- grand staircase national park
- grass
- grasses
- high deseret
- idaho
- jeep trail
- kolob
- lake
- landscape
- leomonade
- mallard
- mark twain
- maui
- mexico
- mormon historical site
- mormon temple
- mountain
- mountains
- national park
- nature
- nauvoo temple
- people
- pheasant
- plant detail
- plants
- prickley pear
- rabbit
- rainbow trout
- rare
- red rock
- redrock
- reflections
- ring neck pheasant
- river
- rivers
- riverscape
- rocky mountain whitefish
- sagebrush
- salt lake city
- scenery
- scenic
- shaffer trail
- sky
- springfield
- stream
- sucker
- sunrise
- sunset
- sunsets
- temple square
- textures
- tiger trout
- tree
- trout
- trout.
- tying
- us capitol
- utah
- washington dc temple
- water
- waterfall
- waterpocket fold
- white rim trail
- wild flower
- wildflower
- winter
- wood duck
- yellowstone
- zion
- zions
How Tags Work
Use tags to classify and group your pictures and videos without having to make new albums. For example, if you tag the pictures of flamingos in your "Mexican Vacation" album and the pictures of penguins in your "Day at the Zoo" album with birds, you can view them together on one page without having to copy the pictures into a separate "Birds" album.
To apply tags, go to a picture, video or album page and click on "tag it." You can also apply tags to yourself by going to your Profile page.