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Public Domain Image Repositories?

musicmaster asks: "If you search the net for free drawings you will find a lot of them, but usually they are free for private use only. I tried to look for drawings that are really free - that is public domain, but I didn't find very much. Wikipedia has some images - scanned from books with expired copyrights - but not much Could you help me further?"

13 of 24 comments (clear)

  1. Free images here by noitalever · · Score: 5, Informative

    This site here, http://www.freeimages.co.uk/ claims that you can use the pics for whatever you see fit.

    No, I don't work there... They also say that you can't use them in collections, which I suppose is their way of saying that they don't want you taking all of their images and doing what they are doing with them... 8-)

  2. the oldies... by ddd2k · · Score: 2, Informative


    you are looking for images that is public domain on the internet? works of art usually have to be at least half a decade old or to have their copyrights expired...

    tho you could always rip pics from the antique roadshow online =)

  3. istockphoto.com by iosphere · · Score: 5, Informative

    Check out www.istockphoto.com. You can download a couple images for free, but after that you need to put up something like fifty cents an image to help with bandwidth and such. But once you download an image, it's yours to do with as you please. The images are of pretty good quality, and there's a decent selection.

  4. Nasa also does not copyright by noitalever · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Any of it's images

    here is a clip from their copyright statement...

    The NASA, JPL, USGS, and NGDC images are in the public domain, but please give them credit when using their images. The following are two statements by NASA:
    No copyright is asserted for these images. If a recognizable person appears in an image, use for commercial purposes may infringe a right of privacy or publicity. These images may not be used to state or imply the endorsement by NASA or by any NASA employee of a commercial product, process or service, or used in any other manner that might mislead. Accordingly, it is requested that if these images are used in advertising and other commercial promotion, layout and copy be submitted to NASA prior to release.
    National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Houston TX, 77058



    All of the images presented on NSSDC's Photo Gallery are in the public domain. As such, they may be used for any purpose. NSSDC does ask, however, that you acknowledge NSSDC as the supplier of the data. In addition, where the source of the image (by project or as a specific person) is credited in the text, you should also acknowledge that, too.

    1. Re:Nasa also does not copyright by Cy+Guy · · Score: 3, Informative

      Actually this is required by copyright law. The government is not allowed to 'compete' with the general populous. One way this is controlled is by not allowing the government to copyright works created by government employees on government time (see Title 17 United States Code section 105.

      There are some copyrights that are owned by the government, but these have to be works that the government bought or commissioned through a contractor. Also, as noted in the first link, some Government created documents / websites contain images that are copyrighted and used by permission. Any third party wishing to use the image would of course have to seperately obtain permission from the copyright holder.

  5. I got it! by photon317 · · Score: 3, Funny


    1. Make new website freepixarchive.com.
    2. Convince VCs you can charge a monthly fee for access to a well-organized archive of public domain imagery.
    3. Ask Slashdot where to get the damn images from because you can't find any.
    4. ????
    5. Profit!

    --
    11*43+456^2
  6. Well... by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 4, Interesting
    There's the "Animal" covers off of the O'Reilly books!

    These come from public domain sources, that Dover re-prints on dead-trees.

    --
    "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
    Never been known to fail..."
  7. careful... by 3-State+Bit · · Score: 4, Interesting

    "scanned from books with expired copyrights"
    Did you know, whoever scans it automagically has the copyrights to the scan itself. It's like when the New York Philharmonic plays Mozart. Sure, the music's out of copyright (not that the United States EVER honored copyrights from the seventeenth century -- it couldn't, cuz' it didn't exist), but each "instantiation" isn't. Photos of famous paintings are the same way.

    So, CAREFUL. Just because Raphael has been more than seventy years dead (or however copyright might read today), doesn't mean that the photographer of the photo you're looking at of one of his painting's is! (That should be rephrased for clarity, but whatever, 3.0 parses it.)

    Likewise, just because the Penguin Classic you're eyeing has a title from the ninteenth century doesn't mean that the particular typography of the book is out of copyright. Only when you hold in your hand a book whose author, and the copyright holder of anything cited "used with permission", has been seventy years dead, can you use extracts from that book, and even then only if you make it yourself.

    In other words, go take a picture of a tree and make it purdy with photoshop. It'll save you trouble.

  8. Check people's web pages? by freshmkr · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Surely lots of people out there have photo archives they wouldn't mind sharing. For instance, to self-link, help yourself to some robots.

    It would be nice if there were a free content mindset out there as pervasive as the free/open source mindset is. It's not obvious, really, for someone to release their goofy pics under a permissive license. I'm not certain how or if it would ever catch on, though years ago I was more or less saying the same thing about open source.

    As for the quality of pics taken by average Joes with digital cameras--that's another matter!

    --Tom

  9. My favorite online images: Library of Congress by Bob+Bitchen · · Score: 5, Informative

    This might well be the most amazing repository of images and documents on the planet.
    They have different sizes of most images. In some cases they have very large (multi-megabyte) TIFF images.

    Check this out, these are panorama images: (really beautiful) http://lcweb2.loc.gov/pp/pansubjindex1.html

    It is really amazing what you can find: http://lcweb.loc.gov/rr/print/catalog.html

    This is a good link too:
    http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/mdbquery.html

    Some are public domain and some are not
    This link describes the many different copyrights and restrictions:
    http://lcweb.loc.gov/rr/print/195_c opr.html

    It's yours so enjoy it!

    --
    http://tinyurl.com/3t236
  10. Wikipedia by EzInKy · · Score: 4, Informative

    "Our goal with Wikipedia is to create a free encyclopedia--indeed, the largest encyclopedia in history, both in terms of breadth and depth. We also want Wikipedia to become a reliable resource. It's an ambitious goal, and it will take many years to achieve it." Pretty cool!

    Found this page with plenty of links to public domain images while I was reading about the project.

    --
    Time is what keeps everything from happening all at once.
  11. The Open Photo Library by Goronguer · · Score: 2
    Check out The Open Photo Library. This site, which is hosted by ibiblio, bills itself as "a collection of copyrighted photographs (approx 20,000) released under a user-friendly license." Definitely worth checking out.

    And check out ibiblio while you're at it. If you don't recognize the name, you may have known them as Sunsite or Metalab.

  12. GIMP-savvy by qengho · · Score: 2

    An interesting project here: http://gimp-savvy.com/PHOTO-ARCHIVE/