"The Commons is a great place to find images that are free of copyright restrictions. But, if The Commons doesn't have what you or your students need for a multimedia project, here are seven other places you can try your search."
Yale University has made more than 250,000 digital images available online. Discover Yale Digital Commons is the search engine for the Yale Digital Commons. Through Discover Yale Digital Commons you can search through the archives of five museums, libraries, and galleries administered by Yale.
The images in the Yale Digital Commons have been labeled Public Domain.
Search engine for images that have Creative Common licensing that can be used in blogs/websites. To download images, cost is $2.99/month. It's always a good idea to educate yourself about the content you use. If you're unsure what Creative Commons is, or why copyright is important, take a few moments, find a few photos and and read the "License" information on the photo's page that comes up when you click "more info." The "more info" link is a great way to learn a little bit about the photograph, author, and various Creative Common's licenses, and what (if any) restrictions are applicable to that particular work.
Created by Debbie Fucoloro - ETMOOC was successful because it provided participants a community built on trust, challenge, self-direction, relevance, and passion.
Here is an inspirational image. I'll use this in professional development settings and to encourage my PLN members.
Sometimes this is the way we feel with events outside of our control.
This a search engine for free photos. These come from many sources and are license-specific. You can view a photo's license by clicking on the license icon, below and left of photos. Membership is free and allows you to rate, tag, collect and comment on photos.
Almost 60,000 free pieces of clipart
"Alternatives to Google Image Search - Richard Byrne - FreeTech4Teachers.com"
Giphy (a search engine for GIFs), created a code that makes GIFs actually loop on Facebook & Twitter. It works simply like posting a link to a video. Either copy paste the URL of the page for the GIF you've selected, or embed straight to Facebook & Twitter from that page from the portion where it says "share GIF.
Collection of free, high quality photos - no attribution required.
Sylvia Duckworth's Sketchnote collection
The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s public domain policy has changed this week, making 375,000 images in the collection free to be used in any which way you can think up.
Step by step instructions by Kasey Bell