Using clipart and How to Cite Your Creative Commons Source
Some of the following websites provide you with clip art that can be used in the presentations. Knowing how to cite the sources is very important. A few of these websites include pictures that are high resolution pics that can be used in presentations while some are free photographs that are available to the users but must be cited properly.
You can always search for free clip art by typing under the search enginge " Free Clip art " or go directly to the following websites for more sophisticated clip art.
http://vintageholidaycrafts.com/free-clip-art
http://wordplay.hubpages.com/hub/vintage-flowers
FreeDigitalphotos.net
Natural Apples by Digital Art with high resoulution
Flickr.com free photographs
It is important to cite the source of your free photograph or clip art, not only because it keeps everything legal, but because the creator of the image deserves recognition - little enough reward for making his/her art freely available.
When you are in the Photo Capsule Edit mode, there are three fields to type into:
1. The Name of Source: Here you should type in just the name of the source, like "Flickr". If you add more words than just the name of the source, the URL won't work as a link.
2. Source URL: This is where you should paste the URL to link to the source's website when asked to do so. By doing it this way, readers will be able to click on the "Source" name and it will backlink to the source's site.
3. Caption: Here you can type in the title of the photograph if it has one, or you can add your own short comment.
2. Source URL: This is where you should paste the URL to link to the source's website when asked to do so. By doing it this way, readers will be able to click on the "Source" name and it will backlink to the source's site.
3. Caption: Here you can type in the title of the photograph if it has one, or you can add your own short comment.
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