How to Find and Use Free Photo Images with Flickr
October 6, 2008
One of the best pieces of advice I received early in my blogging: Use photos to attract reader attention to posts.
Photo by nattu
The images used in posts capture the reader. And, we all want to capture reader attention, right?
So, where do you find great photo images to use freely?
In this post I’ll tell you how to find the best free images on Flickr to use in your blog posts, eBooks, brochures or anything else.
Flickr hosts millions of photos taken by professional and amateur photographers. The best images are richly detailed, vibrant, and inspirational. Images on Flickr fall under a traditional copyright or a Creative Commons license.
Find images on Flickr to freely use
You are not allowed to use copyrighted images without express permission. Who has time for that? If you are like me, the need for a perfect image to use in a post is when I’m writing the post. So, let me tell you about the Creative Commons license to freely use Flickr images.
Non-copyright images on Flickr are available under a different kind of license called Creative Commons. Each image is available under one of six different licenses. For our purposes, we’ll focus on one license.
Attribution License
The images I use come under the Attribution License. You are free to modify the images — crop or caption, for example — as long as you credit the original source with a link back to their Flickr profile.
Find best images on Flickr to freely use
The starting point to find the best free photo images on Flickr is the Attibution License page. Clicking the Flickr Attribution License link navigates to a new window or tab depending on your browser settings.
- Search the keyword appropriate to your needs. To test, search the keyword ‘orange’. Flickr will search the image tags and return the 27,500+ ‘most relevant’ images. But, don’t stop here.
- Look for the ‘most interesting’ link below the displayed number of images. Click ‘most interesting’ to change the display. Most often you will see images of a much higher quality.
- Right click the image to copy or save.
- Copy the link location to credit the original source profile.
- Within seconds you have a targeted image to use in your blog post — or whatever suits your needs.
UPDATE: Be sure to check out the Multicolr Search Lab Flickr Set. Using visual similarity technology you can search Flickr images by color (colour).
Photo by Kyle May
Get More Traffic for Your Blog
September 4, 2008
Michael Martine, better known as Remarkablogger for his remarkable blog consulting and coaching has hit one out of the park with this idea.
Increase Your Blog Traffic
If you just started a blog and want a little increase in blog traffic, here’s what you do:
- Leave a comment at the bottom of this post with your blog’s URL in the website field and describe your blog in a short paragraph.
- Subscribe to my RSS feed (it’s all I ask in return for helping you boost your traffic).
- Make sure you also subscribe to the comments on this post so that you get alerted on every new comment.
- Every time a new comment is added, go and visit that blog! This is simply the golden rule at work: do for others as you would have them do for you. You want traffic? Give traffic.
- But here’s where it really gets good: Subscribe to the other blogs’ RSS feeds.
- Stumble a post or two from the other blogs.
- Write a post on your own blog, link to this post so others can participate and write about the new blogs you have found. Link to them.
That’s it!
You Have to Share to Succeed
If you plan to swoop in with a quick comment, and wait for the flood of traffic… Ain’t gonna happen.
Read the blogs of others. Meet new people. Have a conversation.
Last night I met a Minneapolis ex-Realtor with family in Marietta — never would have happened if I wasn’t subscribed to Remarkablogger.
Play Ball!
The more you give, the more you get.
So, I want all 5 of my readers looking for more traffic to leave a comment now. Subscribe to the comments to round the bases and score more blog traffic.
Photo Credit: william c hutton jr

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