Images

Recommended image collections

Arizona and regional

Arizona Memory Project
Find government documents, photographs, maps, and multimedia from Arizona archives, museums, libraries, and other cultural institutions.

Arizona, Southwestern, and Borderlands Photograph Collection
Photographs related to Arizona, the Southwest, and Borderland region.

University of Arizona Photograph Collection
Images related to the University of Arizona's history.

Art

Artstor
Find images in the arts, architecture, humanities, and social sciences. (Available to University of Arizona affiliates only)

Center for Creative Photography Online Collections
Access photographs from the Center's fine print collection. Images are copyrighted. View CCP Copyright & Permissions for information on use of these images.

Vogue Archive
Features Vogue magazine covers, photo shoots, illustrations, and advertisements. Searchable by designer and brand names. (Available to University of Arizona affiliates only)

Historical and contemporary

Associated Press Images
Search millions of Associated Press news images capturing events around the world from 1800s–today. You'll find everything from the 2016 presidential race to the San Francisco earthquake of 1906. (Available to University of Arizona affiliates only)

Openverse (formerly Creative Commons' CC Search)
This tool allows you to search millions of images from a variety of sites. To search for images only, select Images from the All Content drop-down menu. You can filter results by license, file type, source, and more. The “credit the creator” box provides attribution information. Learn more about CC licenses.

New York Public Library Digital Collections
Browse prints, drawings, photographs, maps, videos, and more. NYPL's Digital Collections span a range of historical eras, covering the applied sciences, fine and decorative arts, history, performing arts, and social sciences.

Digital Public Library of America
Search millions of items from libraries, archives, and museums, or browse online exhibitions.

Smithsonian Libraries' Image Gallery
Browse thousands of images from the collections of Smithsonian Institution Libraries. See usage restrictions. All images in Smithsonian Open Access are in the public domain.

Library of Congress on Flickr
Access more than 38,000 historical images.

LIFE magazine
Search millions of photographs from the LIFE photo archive, stretching from the 1750s to today.

Health sciences

Digital Collections (National Library of Medicine)
Find still and moving images, including Images from the History of Medicine. All content is freely available worldwide and, unless otherwise indicated, in the public domain.

MedPix (National Library of Medicine)
A free open-access database of medical images, teaching cases, and clinical topics.

Public Health Image Library (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)
Search for photographs, images, and videos.

Maps

Aerial photographs

Science

Cell Image Library
Find images, videos, and animations of cells from a variety of organisms. Licenses vary. You can filter by license type using advanced search.

NASA Image and Video Library
Find images, videos, and audio of space exploration. Most images are in the public domain, but see usage guidelines.

Google Advanced Image Search

Google's Advanced Image Search lets you filter by image size and type, color, format, region, usage rights, and more.

Best practices for using images

Select the best images

Images can tell a story and bring content to life. If you're selecting images of people to include in your courses, be sure to represent diversity of gender, ethnicity, and culture. Free sources of diverse images include UnsplashPixabayWomen of Color in TechJopwell (also see photos of interns), Gender Spectrum Collection, and Iwaria. The Gender Spectrum Collection's usage guidelines share ways to improve representation and avoid stereotypes.

Purdue's Online Writing Lab explains other issues to consider when choosing images.

Recognize and comply with copyright

For maximum flexibility, look for images that are in the public domain (not restricted by copyright). Wikimedia Commons lists a number of free and public-domain image sources. Check out PixabayUnsplash, and SnappyGoatEuropeana (Europe's digital library, museum and archive) offers many public domain images. The British Library has released more than 1 million images into the public domain. You can freely use, copy, modify, and share public-domain images, even commercially. While attribution is not legally required, it's good practice.

Images with a Creative Commons (CC) license are another good option. The specific CC license explains what you're allowed to do with the image. At a minimum, you must credit the image's creator. Wikimedia Commonsfeatures more than 71 million CC-licensed and public-domain images. Openverse is an extensive library of free stock photos, images, and audio, available for free use. All Openverse content is under a Creative Commons license or is in the public domain. You can also use GoogleFlickr, and Bing to search for Creative Commons and public-domain images.

If you need to use a copyrighted image, track down the copyright owner and get permission. If you can't find contact information or licensing information for an image, avoid using it outside your course site. 

Use images in the classroom

You may display copyrighted images in face-to-face instruction without permission from the copyright owner. For online instruction, following fair use guidelines, you can display legally acquired copyrighted images without permission when only people in your course can see them (for example on your D2L Brightspace course site). This includes slide decks, assignments, and other content. Just make sure your content isn't open to the world in something like Slideshare or Google Drive.

Instructors, include a notice in your syllabus that "the images should not be downloaded, copied, retained, printed, shared, modified, or otherwise used beyond the permitted educational uses."

Cite images

See How do I cite images?

Make your images accessible

Be sure to follow best practices for accessibility, including the use of alternative text.

Identify existing images

TinEye Reverse Image Search
You can submit an image to TinEye to find out where it came from (and how it should be attributed), how it is being used, if modified versions of the image exist, or to find higher resolution versions.

Google Reverse Image Search
Like TinEye, Google Images allows you to search by image. Select the camera icon in the search box and follow the directions. Tips for using Google Images.

PrePost SEO
You can directly paste an online image URL or you can upload a picture.

Edit images

UA students, faculty, and staff have free access to Adobe Creative Cloud, which includes Photoshop and other design tools. Adobe Photoshop and other graphics software programs are also installed on computers in the Main, Science-Engineering, and Fine Arts libraries.

A number of free photo editing tools are available online, including:

See tips on image editing ethics from Photo Review.

Get help

If you have any usage questions, get in touch with copyright librarian Ellen Dubinsky.

If you have trouble finding images, contact your librarian – we're happy to help.