A word about the Santa pictures.
I've never understood this but color pictures viewed in a browser will have more red hues than in a graphics program.
Not sure why the programmers can't keep images direct from a digital camera look the same in a browser as in a graphics program.
I can understand that different monitors, printers, and types of printer paper will affect the color, brightness, contrast, etc. but why there are differences in software baffles me, but I'm not a software programmer.
I've noticed this for a couple of decades when I post color pictures on my web pages they are not the same as in my graphics programs.
I've researched this quite a bit and the work around is to change the color profile in my graphics program for web browsing so the faces aren't so red.
UNFORTUNATELY if you want to print them or copy them and then view them in your graphics program you WILL be disappointed because the pictures will appear washed out, but if you view them in your browser you will see the quality you want.
I've looked for an option to convert/revert back to the original profile once it has been saved that way, but haven't found one.

BUT I always keep the original files in their original format/profiles.

When I view these Santa pix on my high end digital 30" monitor they look amazing on my system.
The colors of the eyes show up in the close-up shots and you can see other details so I know they should look fine in your browser.
From comparisons with 5 different browsers, I don't see any noticeable differences in quality.

Now some of the pictures won't be the same quality as others - it all depends on the angles taken at the time, if my flash over-powers the lighting from the room - flash provides the best quality.
If the pix were taken in a controlled environment such as a studio and there was lots of extra time, then most of the pictures could be adjusted for the best quality.
I just wanted to make people aware of this so they don't try to adjust their printers or monitors to make the pictures look the same as in their browsers.
So this is a give & take in the digital world.