Hello @wpress2010
That’s strange, you should be able to add images from your media library too. Here’s our official video walk-through of the plugin, does yours look like this? https://wpdrawattention.com/document/create-your-first-draw-attention-image/
Could you try the fix on this guide and see if that helps? https://wpdrawattention.com/document/disabling-3rd-party-scripts/
If you’re still unable to add images to your Draw Attention editor, please reach out to us at support@wpdrawattention.com
I think it is a matter of what I do not see as a really UI here. I was able to add the Image through the box on the right. But once this is done, nothing appears anywhere to show that this image is now available for mapping.
I finally figured out that the Hotspot Areas “Clickable Area #1” link is where one needs to click to add/edit hotspots, but this link doesn’t suggest that it is a clickable thing when you hover over it – it just looks like static text – with an obvious “x” to remove it.
After thinking about this for a while, the Pro version shown on the tutorial video – since it permits more than one image per site – has an Images menu choice in the admin panel. The free version, even if you configure the single permitted image – never shows the Image list. So it is never obvious that you have any Images to edit, in the free version.
@wpress2010 thank you for the honest feedback, we’ll make notes for the developers to help make the initial setup process more intuitive. We know that the editor is in need of many upgrades and improvements.
Sorry for the confusion 🙁 Feel free to reach out for any other questions or concerns!
Thanks. Upon actually going in and configuring a set of hotspots, I have found that this is actually a pretty simple plug to use. Also needed (maybe it’s in the Pro version, I don’t know):
An easy way (without having to go and find the particular element and either hide it or have its child element (the image itself) cleared, via CSS) to remove the title of the image, the h2 element. In my particular case, it took up space to the left of the image, pushing the image itself out of alignment, to the right.
@wpress2010
The closest workaround would require that you leave the title fields blank but this could cause some confusion later down the line when you have more hotspots and images.
The best option would be to hide them using CSS.