OctOPUS Blog - What you can do with Public Domain Photos
and Where you can find them
If you make Photobooks of topics of interest, people will read and buy them. With Photobooks you can offer download versions - but people really want the hard copy.
Where do you find good photos free - other than those you took yourself?
Making a Photobook can be easier than you think. You can laboriously write a book - all your own work. I wrote “Make a Great Photo Album (or Digital Scrapbook) yourself” about 18 months ago http://www.blogger.com/blog-options-basic.g?blogID=7538139763610159291. It needs updating. “Turn your Wedding Photos into Cherished Memories” is still in the draft stage. It’s been like that for months. And it will stay like that for a few more.
You can do far more by cribbing, modifying and republishing. You can do it legally and honestly with public domain information. Or you can supplement your own work with free sources, especially if you are - as I hope you are - making photobooks.
I have subscribed to Tony Laidig ’s Public Domain Codebook. I cannot reproduce that - it’s copyright - but he give a lot of very valuable ideas and I recommend him.
Public Domain Photos
Let’s face it – If I do anything photobooks will be a major part. So where do you find public domain photos? Not from Flikr.
Here are some good sources – remember that laws vary – and US sources are more liberal than European ones. In particular the US Government provides a great fund of useful stuff.
Start here:
US Official Sources
US Government Graphics and Photos
- http://www.usa.gov/Topics/Graphics.shtml
Picture of Yellowstone came from here
National Park Service Digital Image Archive
- http://photo.itc.nps.gov/storage/images/index.html
Online Archive of California
- www.calisphere.universityofcalifornia.edu/
General Sources
Wikimedia Commons Public Domain Collection
- http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Main_Page
The picture of Rochester Castle came from here
Old book Illustrations
- http://www.oldbookillustrations.com/
Yoto Photo (Site currently being redesigned)
Making a PhotoBook
Of course this is where OPUSalbums.com comes in. Just to remind you of our ranges
OPUS Photo Art Hard black cover, D/s Photo Art/Archival Paper, Replaceable sheets, A4L,A3L, 12x12,8x8
Print&Bind Plastic black cover, Glossy Photo Paper, Replaceable sheets, A4
FlexAlbum Hard black cover, Replaceable sheets, paper bought separately, A4, A3L
Pics Book Jr Hard cover (choice of colours), Permanent bound, paper bought separately, A4, A3L, 6x4L
Pics Book Hard cover (chice of colours and windows, Permanent bound, paper bought separately, A4L, A4P, A3L, A5P, 12x12,
For all about our albums see http://www.opusalbums.com/albums

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