This article presents the best current practices for preparation of biological samples for examination as thin sections in an electron microscope. The historical development of fixation, dehydration, and embedding procedures for biological materials are reviewed for both conventional and low temperature methods. Conventional procedures for processing cells and tissues are usually done over days and often produce distortions, extractions, and other artifacts that are not acceptable for today's structural biology standards. High-pressure freezing and freeze substitution can minimize some of these artifacts. New methods that reduce the times for freeze substitution and resin embedding to a few hours are discussed as well as a new rapid room temperature method for preparing cells for on-section immunolabeling without the use of aldehyde fixatives.