Extra Large Duck

DuckDuckGo‘s Image Search has had another expansion. It was already rather good, and now it’s even better.

Finding Extra Large: Extra Large has been added as a filter. This is the main improvement, though in practice it appears this means 1024px or higher. Whereas for a magazine I’d call Extra Large 2048px or higher and even then it would be too small for a double-page spread. Still, the new filter is much better than the fairly useless old ‘Large’ option, which was as high as the Duck used to be able to fly.

Finding Clipart: ‘Types’ includes ‘Animated’, for all your dancing hamster needs. Perhaps that was there before, but I don’t remember it. Definitely new is ‘Transparent’, allowing searches only for isolated items on a transparent background. Sadly you can’t combine ‘Transparent’ + ‘Photograph’ together, so a simple search tends to be awash with very naff clipart when you add “creative commons attribution” and combine it with ‘Extra Large’. Also ‘Transparent’ often appears to give false positives. Still, it’s nice to see it being tried by a major search engine.

Black and White: You can also search by one of many colours or just black-and-white (greyscale). You can usefully chain ‘Black-and-White’ for a search for large Creative Commons pictures. Though this will tend to pick up blogs where the text is CC but the pictures discussed are not (or are doubtful, perhaps being from that one idiot on Flickr who’s put tens of thousands of superb vintage pictures under CC when they’re not).

There’s also ‘Proportion’ (square, tall, wide).

Possibly the ‘Regions’ filter has also had a makeover, but I never use it so I’m not sure. However I certainly don’t remember it had mini-flags before, or so many nations.

Finding hi-res public domain images in Getty Open Content

Getty Open Content in the Getty Art Collection. Google Search results for site:www.getty.edu/art/collection/ “without charge” suggests there are currently around 1,700 such images in the Getty Open Content public domain programme. Sharp 20mb+ hi-res versions are available, though a simple anonymous form on which the user tells Getty the intended use.

The Getty has an Advanced Search panel which can limit the search results to Getty Open Content. A test for “rabbit” unearthed nine items, but failed to unearth a delightful rabbit in a 13th century illuminated manuscript.

The manuscript rabbit was however found via a straightforward keyword search in DuckDuckGo’s Image Search…

site:www.getty.edu/art/collection “without charge” rabbit

However I should note that DuckDuckGo Image Search also failed to find the other nine “rabbit” results.

Further perusal of the 17Mb source picture for the single-rabbit image found by DuckDuckGo, revealed there were actually two such rabbits on the manuscript page…

Thus a combination of a Getty Advanced Search and DuckDuckGo Image Search seems useful for public domain picture researchers.

Radio Times searchable listings – now back to 1923

The UK’s Radio Times listings magazine is available online from 1923 to 2009. The magazine was once the nation’s vital weekly TV and radio listings title. When last noted on the JURN blog, back in 2014, I think the new online listings had only extended as far back as the 1960s. Possibly there were also no thumbnail cover-scans back in 2014, but there are now.

You can’t actually click through to hear programmes, due to a combination of the trades unions and the surprising and very regrettable lack of tape archives. So if you do spot gems in the listings, like the 26-part radio history of The British Seafarer (1980) with music and FX by the Radiophonic Workshop… it’s gone forever.