diff --git a/docs/development/01designprocess.md b/docs/development/01designprocess.md
index 5a8bc03f99a77255c48e2f7934cef8df5ee39ece..a785b4f8cfb786f3a36292b4d3d12a018595ffb8 100644
--- a/docs/development/01designprocess.md
+++ b/docs/development/01designprocess.md
@@ -34,7 +34,7 @@ With the abandonment of the communal parish coffin at the end of 17th century, i
 
 By the end of the 19th century, the shroud had changed from a sheet to **a tailored garment**. Coffin sheets were no longer necessarily needed as the shroud developed a style of its own. **An English Shroud, reminiscent of a Christening robe, is a single piece of clothes which goes around the waist down to the feet with no backs**. They were laid over the body and then tucked in at the sides. A bodice around the chest was designed with decorations. Male shrouds tended to have sans bows, while women had a high-neck frill and less ruching panels on the torso. 
 
-![englishshrouds](../images/process/Shrouds-Dottridge.jpeg){ width=600 }
+![englishshrouds](../images/process/Shrouds-Dottridge.jpeg){ width=600,align=middle }
 
 By the early 20th century, many companies were offering unisex shrouds in stead of seperating men’s and women’s styles.