Why
is it so hard to find pictures? | How
can I find pictures or photographs on the web? | Where
to go to search for images |
Why is it so hard to find the
pictures I want?Well, when we
consider how we actually look for images on the web, the reason why it is
hard to find them quickly becomes apparent. When searching for pictures on
the web, we use keywords which we hope will coincide with descriptive
terms or file names which have been somehow "added" to the
images. If these terms have not been applied or added to a record
describing the image, we cannot find them. In other words, search engines
look for pictures based on indexed terms, usually not on any formal
attributes or interior elements such as "black" or "forest" (unless, of
course, these terms are attached or accompany the image).
Most pictures have file names that are rather
cryptic such as blufoot.jpg or ampag.gif. When you conduct a search for
images, often you are in fact looking for file extensions and a keyword
such as:
|
blue
and
.gif |

blue.gif |
If your keywords are not in the filename
(blue.gif or cat.jpg) you may not be able to find what you need. Sometimes
descriptive terms are applied to images to assist folks looking for them
and in some cases, the images may be cataloged and/or classified, all
making our searches easier. |
|
or |
|
cat
and
.jpg |

cat.jpg |

How can I find pictures or
photographs on the web?You
can search for images by using one of the "major" search engines, a
specialized utility or by locating sites which are likely to contain a lot
of images or links to images (such as museums or art galleries).
Search engines almost always identify images
by filename extension (such as .jpg or .gif) and by html "attributes"
(such as the "ALT" tag which loads before or instead of an image, the "IMG
SRC" tag (meaning imbedded image) or the "HREF" tag or field
(meaning hypertext reference)). They combine the idea or
identification of an "image" with your other keywords which it locates in
various fields of the web document (which fields or areas depends on the
search utility you are using). Look for the image (Hotbot) or
picture (Lycos) and similar limit fields in the "major" search
engines.
Search utilities with databases of
catalogued images are the most reliable way to search for images.
Humans assign descriptive terms of picture elements, style, content and
subject. Pictures containing your search terms are retrieved based on the
indexed terms. This method is extremely labour intensive and time
consuming; it is also very expensive which is why you often have to pay to
search indexed image banks.
Specialized sites often have images arranged
by categories with a variable amount of accompanying data.

Where to go to search for
images:
Searching by file extension
or html attributes
-
Altavista
(http://www.altavista.com/
-
Hotbot
(http://www.hotbot.com)
-
Lycos
(http://multimedia.lycos.com/)
-
WebSEEk
(http://disney.ctr.columbia.edu/webseek)
Cataloged and / or Classified
Images
Image
Banks
-
Art Images for College
Teaching
(http://www.mcad.edu/AICT/AICT.html)
"AICT is a royalty-free image exchange
resource for the educational community." Features images organized by
time periods (Ancient, Medieval, Renaissance and Baroque, 18th-20th
centuries and Non-Western.
-
Art Image Browser: Home
Page
(http://www.si.umich.edu/Art_History/)
A collection of images of art,
architectural and museum objects from the University of Michigan History
of Art Department, the Kelsey Museum of Archaeology, the University of
Michigan Museum of Art and Chicano Murals located in Los Angeles.
-
ArtServe -- The Australian
National University
(http://rubens.anu.edu.au/index.html)
Art history database consisting of nearly
80 000 images of art and architecture.
Art
Resources / Museums

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