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4 Best Practices for Finding Facebook and Blog Images

This content provides tips for finding beautiful images for Facebook and blog posts, including using Creative Commons License and stock photo sites.

By Dana Kilroy ・2 min read
ShortStack Tips & Tricks
Social Media

Recently we've received a ton of questions about best practices for finding photos for Facebook posts and blog articles. One of the reasons is that there has been a lot of coverage about the fact that photos in the News Feed receive better engagement than a general status update. Facebook's redesigned News Feed which emphasizes larger photos proves the point!But how do you avoid violating copyright when using images? The general preference is to use a photo that you've taken yourself, but sometimes that's not an option. With easy access to millions of photos it can be tempting to pull a photo from Google Images and use it to assist your blog or Facebook post. However, this is not a suggested or best practice. We recommend using images with defined licensing to save yourself a copyright-violations headache.

Use these tips for finding beautiful images for Facebook and blog posts:

1. Search under Creative Commons License

Creative Commons License are licenses that allow photographers to choose which rights they reserve and which rights they waive for their work. Some websites offer photos that fall under the Creative Commons License which have been approved by the original creator to be used by a third-party.  The owners of the photos have chosen whether they want attribution or not when their photos are used, and these photos are available for use as long as you abide by the Creative Commons License. Flickr includes more than 17 million photos licensed under Creative Commons License. There are several other Creative Commons Licensed images than can be found from a simple Google search.

flickr

2. Search Google's Publicly Reusable Images

In Google's Advanced Image Search you can filter your image search by licensed for public reuse. When you open the Advanced Image Search an option appears at the bottom to choose Usage Rights. You can use the drop down menu to choose how you'd like to filter your Images. You can choose from "free" to use or "share," "free to use or share, even commercially,"  "free to use or share or modify," and "free to use, share, or modify, even commercially." You know exactly what you're getting when you use Google's Advanced Image Search and there are several million photos to choose from.

3. Search Free Stock Photo Sites

There are a variety of affordable sites where you can find quality (and legal) stock photography. One of our personal favorites is ShutterStock where we have a monthly subscription and are allotted a certain amount of photos to use each day. A recent blog post from TheMarketingAgents.com provides a detailed list of 13 free and cheap stock photos. You can read the article here. We've listed out the thirteen sites below, but for details on photo prices and types of photos offered reference the original article.

googlesearch

Pond5 - The World's Stock Media MarketplaceiStockphoto - Royalty Free Stock PhotographyDreamstime - Download Stock Photography and Royalty Free Images123RF - Royalty Free Stock PhotosBigstock - Images for EveryoneMedia Bakery - Millions of Curated Stock PhotosShutterStock - Over 20 Million Stock Photos, Illustrations, Vectors and VideosDepositphotos - Royalty-Free Stock Photos, Illustrations and Vector ArtFlickr / Creative Commons Attribution Licence

4. Create your own images

As mentioned earlier, our number one recommendation for photos is to create your own. Obviously this isn't always an option, but self-created images hold several benefits. You don't have to worry about copyright laws, they're more personal to your business, and you won't get stuck using the typical stock images that we see far too often across the web.Where do you get photos for your blog and Facebook Page? Are there some other resources we should know about? Please let us know @shortstacklab.

About the author

By Dana Kilroy ・2 min read
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Dana Sullivan Kilroy is a communications professional with more than 20 years of experience delivering compelling content. Her work has appeared in national, award-winning publications and sites, including: The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, The Wall Street Journal, USA Today, and Fast Company, Inc.

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