Working Webmaster
Create, maintain, and promote websites at free or low cost.-
Free clip art-Totally, royalty-free ethical clipart, graphics, and images Even For Commercial Use!
Posted on September 10th, 2009 5 commentsCreating a good website on a budget is hard. One of the toughest assignments is acquiring attractive, appropriate images at a good price. Many of us, , even accomplished artists, rely heavily clip art and stock graphics to get the job done. There are thousands of sites with such art available but they are a potential legal and ethical minefield, because you are usually required to compensate the artists when you use them on a commercial site.
Free Clip art, graphics, and royalty free stock photography images
There are lots of articles pointing you to free graphics sites. These sites almost always require payment for commercial use. Gee, thanks.
Royalties: The Gift That Keeps On Taking
Sometimes it’s not just once, either. Several popular stock photography sites require royalty payments not just on first use, but four times a year beyond that. Fees can be thousands of dollars per year, for as long as you use them. Ow.
What makes this article different is that the free clip art and stock graphics here are all not only free to acquire, but they are also royalty–free and rights–cleared, meaning you can use them on your site without having to pay anyone.
So what’s the catch? Originally, my main point here was going to be that these images are of somewhat lower quality than their commercial counterparts. Reviewing these sites pulled me to the opposite conclusion. There’s a ton of great stuff here.
In most cases the main restriction is that you are not allowed to copy the entire collection and republish it as your own. And in the case of the Creative Commons license, you must be sure to include some kind of attribution to the creator somewhere on your website (this is good form under any circumstances). Feel free to use as many of these free clip art images as you want on web pages you have designed, however, even for sites where they are expected to (gasp!) make money.
Note: This replaces the gratifyingly popular Working Webmaster Special Report
Tens of thousands of people viewed the earlier version of this article, but I’ve learned a lot since then. While its contents are still valid I’ve added more sources of free graphics and have added a number of new sites.
Freerange Stock
Wouldn’t it be great if pro photographers gave up some of their images for the good of the world, and could maybe make a couple bucks in the process? Done and done. Freerange Stock has many excellent stock photographs you can use free, even in commercial ventures. They hope to make it back in Google ad revenues. I hope they do. Revenues are shared with the photographers.
http://freerangestock.com/index.php
Flickr Creative Commons Attribute License (Beware!)
Flickr is a huge site consisting of nothing but user-uploaded content, so it can be used in your commercial products, right? No! At least, not unless you search using the right advanced options. Flickr allows use of the Creative Commons Attribution licensing scheme, which is surprisingly badly explained on the Creative Commons main license page. Here’s the lowdown. Attribution lets you use the content commercially. You simply have to credit the original author. So use Flickr images to your heart’s content as long as you restrict your search to the right terms.
If the link above doesn’t work properly:
- Use Flickr’s Advanced Search. Handy tip: Flickr has other media besides photographs. Check off each category that applies next to Search by content type.
- Choose Only search within Creative Commons-licensed content.
- Under that check Find content to use commercially.
- Click the Search button.
http://www.flickr.com/search/?q=&l=comm&ct=0&mt=all&adv=1
Stock.XCHNG – FREE stock photo site
Probably the best known of the free image sources here, Stock.XCHNG (or possibly just stock.xchng; their usage is asn inconsistent as their URL is weird) has such slickly commercial images that you wonder how they manage to stay “in business”. With a user interface rivaling that of, say, the Corbis site, it has quality to match in its selection of 400,000 images. In many cases if you whipped out a presentation using these images no one would guess they came from a totally free source. Perhaps the best for the kind of images you would like to appear in a corporate PowerPoint snoozer (but I mean that in a good way; they are what people hope to get when they’re doing a presentation).
PDClipart.org – Public Domain Clip Art
Browse this during your downtime and you’ll find some real gems. It is a comprehensive and well–categorized site that verges perilously close to commercial quality. I have used some of the image credits to track down artists for additional work.
freestockphotography
An up-and-comer, this site is perhaps the smallest but its average image quality is strikingly high. The vast majority could appear in a magazine spread and the results would never screen low budget.
http://www.adigitaldreamer.com/gallery/index.php
PD Photo Free Photos and Pictures (public domain, stock pictures, royalty free. clip art, etc.)
Jon Sullivan has contributed thousands of his own pictures to the public domain in an act of extreme generosity. His category system is faultless and thorough. PD Photo is clean and very easy to navigate. Travel, events such as airshows and parades, and such critically important topics as cheese are covered with commercial grade photographs. A few of them are copyrighted, apparently because they use copyrighted subject matter, but he still makes them free to use; see the Copyrighted section for details.
The Peirce Clipart Collection
Surprisingly high quality free clip art collection and, pleasantly, most images are in at least three formats: web-ready bitmaps, PDF, and WMF (a Windows graphic format).
http://clipart.peirceinternet.com/
WPClipart Fast, clean clip art
A massive 25,000 free clip art collection of public domain images “specifically tailored for use in word processors” and optimized for inkjet output. It even includes notes on using OpenOffice. This free clip art collection is a labor of love. Paul Sherman, the maintainer, has gone far past the extra mile in retouching and improving many of the images while still not claiming copyright on his changes. Emphasis is on older but eminently useful images.
The Fantastic in Art and Fiction
A treasure trove for the graphically adventuresome, these are high–quality free clip art scans from science fiction, fantasy, and the totally deranged over a period of hundreds of years. These are so ridiculously cool I sort of hate to give any other designers the edge, but here goes.
http://fantastic.library.cornell.edu/
Images in the Public Domain
A fun collection of free clip art to browse with a unique user interface for browsing multiple images at once. These are older graphics but Photoshop enthusiasts could have a field day remixing them.
http://srufaculty.sru.edu/david.dailey/public/public_domain.htm
Copyright-Free Photo Archive: Public Domain Photos and Images
Photos primarily from NASA, NOAA (The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration), and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Do not underestimate this resource. Many of the images are stunning and go well beyond what you would expect out of free clip art.
http://gimp-savvy.com/PHOTO-ARCHIVE/
Public Domain Clipart
A large, varied, and delightfully quirky collection of free clip art images from many sources, old and new. Leave extra time to browse because this wonderful site is like potato chips. You can’t just sample a page or two of this site. Many of the photographs come from the maintainers, who go by the collective name of sookietex, so you won’t find these images anywhere else. Again, highly recommended.
http://publicdomainclip-art.blogspot.com/
U.S. Government Photos and Graphics: USA.gov
As befits a giant bureacracy, the name is boring. But expect to be surprised by the wealth of free clip art and images tied together from a wide variety of sources. Who would have expected the people who brought us the IRS to give us the gift of Earth as Art, with stunning, often abstract photographs that not only make great wallpaper for your computer but which could also be used as backgrounds for home page logos.
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Wordpress for small business websites: On the Web in an Hour
Posted on June 30th, 2009 2 commentsWordPress web marketing types: Highly recommended is On the Web in an Hour, the best introduction I know of to business blogging with WordPress. If you want to create a small business website, you’re stupid not to use WordPress. If the WordPress auto install features have you baffled, here’s where to start. It’s the best of its kind, but I’m biased: I wrote it! Get On the Web in an Hour if you have any trouble at all installing WordPress. And don’t forget it has a no-questions-asked money back guarantee. Which no one has yet taken advantage of.
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Google keyword stats let you sanity-check a product idea instantly
Posted on March 4th, 2009 3 commentsSometimes we mentally filter out useful data out of sheer habit. I do. Today I realized that I can use plain ol’ Google to do an instant check on the search results for a product idea, without even having to visit the Google Keyword tool. Allyou have to do is visit Google, start typing, and as soon as something sensible comes up Google lets you know the search volume before you even press Enter. It’s product research without even finishing a Google search!

You can sanity check a product idea on Google by just typing!
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Why my picture doesn’t appear on this blog
Posted on March 2nd, 2009 2 commentsBecause it looks like this:
Actually this is a test to see if WP-DBBackup by the estimable Lester Chan backups up images in blogs. WP-DBBackup is the only WordPress plugin I know that not only backs up, but restores files from the WordPress dashboard.
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Instant research boost for information product developers
Posted on February 25th, 2009 1 commentpdf Search Engine is a one-trick pony with a trick that internet marketers developing an information product will love. When you search for a topic you’ll get a stripped-down, all-business result set with nothing but PDF files. I have been amazed at the quality of files it provides. pdf Search Engine is like a research shortcut; for reasons I haven’t quite figured out PDF files just appear to have higher quality information locked inside them. Within 5 minutes of discovering it I found some can’t miss information for my newest product.
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The secret research tool everybody has and no one knows about
Posted on January 22nd, 2009 1 commentMost of us know that Amazon is a great place to do trends research: seeing what’s selling well is a great way to mine for affiliate or info product opps. But if you’re researching an article, blog post, or info product you can drill much deeper by actually reading parts of the book online! When you’re looking at a book listing hover over the Click to Look Inside! thumbnail of the book. You’ll then be launched into a special reader that offers (variously) random pages (Amazon calls is “Surprise Me!”, front matter, back cover, and index–all of which can be gold for the information prospector. Understandably they don’t allow copy and paste. Just jot down relevant information into a text editor or Google Docs. It has the fringe benefit of helping you learn the material better.
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Good free favicon generator
Posted on January 14th, 2009 2 commentsHad to blast out a favicon quickly. DynamicDrive FavIcon Generator is one of those great services that just works. I gave it a .jpg file that wasn’t even square, and it kicked out a perfect little favicon.
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An online image editor that actually works
Posted on January 14th, 2009 1 commentWhile building a new site I had to throw a logo together quickly on a machine with no graphics editor installed. I was very, very pleasantly surprised by Pixlr, an online image editor that strikes the perfect balance in features. It’s free, it has an adequate feature set, it doesn’t require registration, and, incredibly, it’s stable. None of the other similar products I’ve seen in this realm match that kind of package. I would pay for it, though in the web world I’m sure I’m part of a minority. Try, even if you’ve been disappointed by the others. It may just surprise you.
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Claim This, Technorati
Posted on January 12th, 2009 1 commentI’m pretty sure something awesome is going to happen once Technorati claims me. I’m not really clear about it, but… awesome. Here’s to you, Technorati Profile.
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10 Seconds to more video traffic: a Working Webmaster Special Report
Posted on January 8th, 2009 2 commentsVideo marketing is new enough that even the pros are screwing it up at an alarming rate. They are forgetting simple but enormously powerful branding techniques that any freshman marketing student could recite in her sleep. If you do any video marketing or plan to, you can easily add about 10 seconds of crucial material at very low cost that could drive traffic through the roof. Check out the new Working Webmaster special report
Did you just fail Video Internet Marketing 101?



