This page will eventually show close-up photos of spawning Angelfish and eggs. In the meantime, here are a few pictures of fry and some breeding info below...
Pic 1 is a side view of an Angel fry, only a week or two old. You can see how at this young age, they do not have the typical Angelfish shape yet.

Pic 2 is Angel fry hunting down baby brine shrimp (BBS). Notice their pink bellies are full of BBS. That's how you are sure they are getting enough to eat.
Pic 3 is a curious little fellow looking straight at the camera! What a mug!
If you decide to breed Angels, how do you tell the males from the females? Study the medium/large Angels in your local fish store. Your best bet is to assume that the ones with the thin bellies are males and ones with the rounded bellies are females carrying eggs. You've got to study them head-on to notice the difference. This method is not 100% accurate because females without eggs look like males but it will give you better odds than just picking randomly.
When your Angels spawn, if you want to assure that the eggs aren't eaten, you should remove them to a large container with an airstone for circulation. I no longer add Methylene Blue drops to prevent fungus, because over the years, I've noticed the eggs sometimes fungus regardless of whether Methylene Blue is added or not. I think if your eggs continuously get fungus, too swift of water current might be interferring with the fertilization process. All unfertilized eggs will fungus and die.
If your eggs hatch successfully, in a few days you will have wrigglers. They can be moved to a 2.5 or 5 gallon tank kept at 78 to 80 degrees with a small bubble-up corner filter or sponge filter. The most important factor to successfully raising Angelfish is providing freshly hatched baby brine shrimp for them to eat because without it, the Angel fry won't thrive. (I've tried non-live, dry fry foods that claim to be good replacements for live BBS but my results were poor). Start feeding the live BBS when the fry begin to swim 5 or 6 days after hatching. Once you start feeding them, do a 50 percent water change every other day. There are many good Brine Shrimp hatching tutorials already on the net... here's an excellent one at the wonderful Betta Talk website and another here at Aquarium Hobbyist . Once you get good at hatching BBS, the rest is a breeze and you will get such satisfaction in raising your own Angelfish!