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6 tips for finding the perfect photo for your project

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You could transform stock imagery by making a creative composite image like this (Image by Vladimir Sazonov; click to see it on Shutterstock)

Whether you’re a web designer, graphic designer, 3D artist, illustrator or traditional artist, you’ll need beautiful images in order to do your job. Sometimes you might have the time, budget and skills to create or commission your own, but sometimes one of those magic ingredients might be missing.

Stock libraries such as Shutterstock are brimming with high-quality photography, illustrations, vectors and even video footage to make your life easier on these occasions. Shutterstock has also worked hard to make searching for these assets much easier, adding intuitive filters, collections and more to help you find the image that’s right for your creative project.

You could use stock images for all manner of reasons – from reference images to inspire your artworks, to injecting interest into prototypes, to polishing a printed design. Here are 6 tips to help you find the perfect image right now.

01. Plan what you’ll use your image for 

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This vibrant image combines colour, eye contact and humour – perfect for a shopping site’s hero image (Photo by Dean Drobot; click to see it on Shutterstock)

Whether your image will be used as a website header, a background image or turned into a creative composite like the image above will have a huge effect on what sort of image you need. It sounds obvious, but thinking about the purpose of the image will save you a lot of half-hearted searching. 

If you are creating a magazine or website homepage layout then a colourful image will grab more attention and hold its own better than a dull one. Photos with people in, especially where those people are making eye contact, are proven to draw the eye the most. Try browsing Shutterstock’s People image collection as a starting point.

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A flat background will make it far easier to cut out your subjects (Image by Eric Isselee; click to see it on Shutterstock)

On the other hand, if you need stock images to work with creatively, those with white backgrounds will be easiest to cut out in order to transform them with masks, colour inversions and so on. Adding ‘white background’ to the subject of your search is a simple way to get the most relevant results. Typing ‘birds white background’ found us a huge variety of photos we could work with.

02. Search by image

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Got a low res image that you like? Find a similar one with image search

Artists and designers are, obviously, visual people. And sometimes it’s just easier to show what you want than it is to describe what you want in words. With that in mind, Shutterstock has the option to search for images with another image.

Ever found an image when looking around the web for inspiration, or been sent a photo by a client that has a good subject but is unusable as it is? Then use image search.

Simply hit the camera icon in the search bar to bring up the option to search by image. Then, drag and drop or upload the image that you want to search for to see similar results.

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Image search results are impressive

In the screenshots above, we uploaded a tiny low res image of a leaf that we liked the shape of, and were given 100 high res images with varying colours, backgrounds, interesting details and shapes.

03. Refine your search using filters

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Tie the colours of your images into the rest of your design

Colour is a powerful tool that evokes different emotional responses in people, so colour in branding and design is understandably important. With that in mind, why not narrow down your search results by looking at those that just contain hues of a key colour for your design? Simply type in a search term then, when the results page comes up, click on the dropdown menus to filter the results.

As well as colour, these intuitive filters include options to filter your image search results by type, orientation, people (number, gender, age and ethnicity) and category. These filters make finding the right image for your project easier than ever.

04. Use curated collections

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This photo from the Storytellers collection invites audiences to wonder (Photo by Tatiana Bobkova; click to get it on Shutterstock)

If you fancy a change from thinking of search terms and browsing pages of search results, Shutterstock’s carefully curated collections group together the best images around a theme. These collections are packed with inspiration and high quality imagery waiting to be stumbled upon. The Storytellers collection, for example, contains images that will surprise and intrigue audiences.

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This photo from the Changing seasons collection lends designs timeliness (Photo by Leonid Ikan; click to get it on Shutterstock)

The Changing seasons collection, meanwhile, offers a huge range of images that have been chosen for being seasonal without being cheesy. 

Find the curated collections through the buttons on Shutterstock’s home page, along with other helpful design tips. By clicking on one of the images in the collection (or, indeed, any image you find on the Shutterstock site), you’ll also see suggested similar images and images by the same photographer underneath, offering yet more inspiration.

05. Consider illustrations, vectors or even video

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Illustrations cover all sorts of subjects and colour palettes (Illustration by miniwide; click to get it on Shutterstock)

Shutterstock is known for its diverse range of professional photography, but its library of illustrations, vectors and videos could also be striking options for your next project. After all, in a modern world full of photography, there’s something refreshing about a lovingly-drawn illustration. 

Subjects large and small appear in its illustration library, drawn in a range of styles from intricate, hand-drawn studies, to black and white sketches, to bold, geometric digital art.

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Shutterstock even has paper art images (Image by TAW4; click to get it on Shutterstock)

You can browse the illustration library at www.shutterstock.com/search/illustrations or search for a particular subject and select ‘illustrations’ from the dropdown menu, rather than ‘all images’. 

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This vector would lend a high-end feel to a header or background (Image by RODINA OLENA; click to get it on Shutterstock)

Similarly, Shutterstock’s library of vectors also boasts a range of styles, colours and subjects, with featured collections spanning wedding invitations, pop art, doodles and sketches, winter patterns and more.

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Draw attention by looping video clips like this mesmerising footage of the aurora borealis (Still from a video by Jamen Percy; click to see it on Shutterstock)

Finally, could your web project, social media campaign or presentation actually benefit from some moving photography? Homepages featuring video are a growing trend, with the right footage able to communicate your values and aspirations as articulately as a well crafted paragraph of text. 

With over 8.5 million video clips priced from £19, check out Shutterstock’s video library now, or select ‘footage’ from the search bar dropdown.

06. Don’t forget the free photos

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Just put your details in and click ‘create account’ in this area of Shutterstock’s homepage, and you’ll get two free images every week

Our final tip will save you money and time. Sign up for a free account with Shutterstock today and you’ll be given access to a free photo and a free vector each week. 

Even if you don’t need them for your current project, downloading them and saving them in your own personal library will mean you’ll gradually build up a collection of high-quality images ready to use as soon as they are useful. Easy.

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