Where Do I Get Images?

file0002138246422 smYesterday I posted, “Are You Stealing Images?” Today I am going to provide some resources that deal with graphics.

Before you use any images, make sure you read and understand the licensing associated with the image. Some sites include images you can use willy-nilly as you wish and ALSO include images that need you to give credit where credit is due.

Bottom line – read the licensing. The good news here is that the sites I am listing have easy to understand licensing terms. You will know if you have to let the photographer know you are using his/her image, or if you simply need to give credit on the page. It won’t be some legalese that you cannot understand. I have created a list of sources you can use:

Request Your “Find Free Fantastic Images” Report!




Here is a partial list of some great sites that deal with images: http://www.freeimages.com/ – free images – some need attribution, some don’t.

http://morguefile.com/ – free images you can use

http://creativecommons.org/ – some attribution (maybe?) ย  If you are using other sites, leave a comment below. If you are NOT using another site, I am interesting in hearing from your about this list! By the way – today’s nice and wild image came from Morguefile ๐Ÿ™‚ (I say that for INFO only purposes to you – I did not need to cite my source!)




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34 Comments

  1. Valuable information which I have shared on social media. I didn’t know about any of these sites. Perhaps, now, I don’t need to fear using anything except my photos or photos of friends.

    1. Daja – I nearly marked this as SPAM! LOL! I checked out that site – way cool! I was using Photoshop to animate gifs but this is sooooo much easier! Thanks for sharing!

  2. Hi Paul,

    Thanks for the information. Nice to have free sites. I’ve used 123rf.com for mine just to make sure; but I would love to have the time to make my own! Have a great day!

    1. 123rf is a good site – I had/have an account over there. Usually when I am doing work for a client and they need a specific image, I have to resort to purchasing it from a site like that.

  3. Great resources, it is lovely to have good images for blog posts, and I certainly don’t want to be unknowingly using images the wrong way. The creative commons and intellectual property can sometimes get a bit blurry. So thank-you for this list of resources I will be checking them out. At the moment I am using Picasa and Picmonkey to alter my own photo’s and pretty them up. It is always good to have a number of options.

    1. Yes, Fran! Options are good – that is why I listed a few different selections. I am going to check out PicMonkey and play around with it – looks interesting!

  4. I love Pixabay and seem to live in there! Gratisography also has some great photos and is updated weekly.
    Also check out photopin (there’s a commercial and non-commercial search). Credit is required when using these photos but they give you a handy html to add.

    1. Thanks for these sites, Jan! I love Gratisography! I am going to be there a lot! Photopin is interesting as well. Thank you!

  5. Paul, I want to thank you for your last 2 posts. I have always used my own images before. But I have been lazy and careless lately even though I always give credit.

    I’m back to using only my own stuff. I have pretty good photos and I can doodle some neat stuff. Thanks for the sites. It’s tempting but I decided not to.

    Thanks for the steering. ๐Ÿ™‚

    Lily

  6. Great blog with valuable resource! This is exactly what I was looking for. I saved it for future use. Downloaded a few free pics from one of the links in your blog.

  7. I read that we should label our images with our website URL so if someone pins it on Pinterest it would show where the photo came from. What is your opinion Paul, could we legally do that on free images we use?

    Also, how is everyone’s image of their face showing up on their posts here while mine shows a crazy clipart?

    Thanks ๐Ÿ™‚

    1. Hey there Crazy Clipart Face –

      First let’s address your look, shall we? Here is a link to a post I wrote a while ago that addresses it: WordPress & Gravatars.

      Next, it seems to be a great idea to watermark your own images so at any pointin time, people know where they came from (i.e., your site).

  8. Great article, Paul – with links to free images I hadn’t been introduced to before. I’ve got a new one for you – unsplash dot com. They provide high resolution photos with permission to do with them whatever you please. I notice a lot of bloggers use their images, so there’s that issue … but it’s a good site with an archive that is always growing. Thank you for the valuable tips!

  9. I take a lot of my own pics or make them on PicMonkey, Canva, or Pixlr. But I also subscribe to Image Monthly from Kelly McCausey and with it you get 25 images every month. I don’t use them all, but most certainly use some of them every month.

  10. Thanks for this! I use mostly my own images, but once in awhile, I don’t have anything that fits, and need something from the web. I didn’t know I couldn’t just use images that pop up. I figured they would have a watermark or something like that if I couldn’t use them. Oops!

    1. Be careful, Doree! Always gets permission before using any images – or go to one of the safe sources!

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