Flickr: BHL’s Unexpected Success Story
In July, 2011, several members of the BHL staff began putting illustrations from BHL books on Flickr. It started as a simple way to flag favorite staff images and document the illustrations we were using in various outreach activities, like Twitter and Facebook. Today, our Flickr presence has grown to a collection of over 24,000 images and has become one of the most user-celebrated aspects of the BHL project, prompting such statements as “I think I’m in love” and “My favorite Flickr in the whole world!” Several people have asked us to share our experiences using Flickr as a component of BHL and discuss its growth from inception to the success it is now. We couldn’t think of a better place to do this than on our blog.
What’s In It for Us? The Benefits of Flickr
Using Flickr has generated a variety of benefits for the BHL project, many of which were unexpected. First and foremost, Flickr provides us with an easy way to showcase our amazing images – a BHL treasure that was all but hidden in our collection. Before Flickr, there was no simple way for users to access the images in BHL. Now, using Flickr sets and collections, users can go to one place and quickly browse thousands of images. And all of these images are available for free download and re-use, which is an excellent “selling” point for anyone interested in finding gorgeous natural history and botanical illustrations.*
Flickr also allows us to broaden our outreach potential, branching outside of our classic BHL interface and reaching our users on a new platform. The audience using Flickr is often quite different from our traditional user base, thus having a presence on Flickr means that we are able to reach a whole new group of people, including artists and k-12 educators.
Our Flickr group has also provided many unexpected benefits to BHL staff. Not only can users more easily find BHL images, but so can we! What started as a way to document those images we were already using in social media quickly became the source of much of this activity. Flickr images provide excellent fodder for our various social media activities, including tweets, facebook posts and trivia, and provide inspiration for many of our Book of the Week posts. Staff can now easily find illustrations to “spice up” BHL promotional materials, including brochures, business cards, banners, and merchandise, or even bring flair to events like donation campaigns. Plus, incorporating images into BHL reports transforms the otherwise boring white pages into alluring, eye-catching documents that people actually want to read.
The World of Tagging Images: Machine Tags
Through the use of machine tags, Flickr also allows us to collaborate more extensively with projects like EOL. Machine tags look like:
- “taxonomy:binomial=Aegotheles savesi” (quotes required due to space b/w Genus & species)
- taxonomy:family=Fabaceae
- taxonomy:genus=Rhinoceros
- taxonomy:common=Cardinal
Any time an image from our Flickr photostream is machine tagged, it becomes “flagged” for inclusion into the EOL Group Pool and will thus become a part of EOL species pages. (Images are added to the EOL pool on a monthly basis).
See this example of an EOL page for Corvus crassirostris. You’ll notice that the image of the Thick-billed Raven from the BHL Flickr set Album of Abyssinian Birds and Mammals is featured on the page. How cool is that?! In addition to the links from EOL pages (under the “Literature” tab) to taxonomic name occurrences in BHL, now BHL image content can be repurposed directly onto EOL species pages.
We would absolutely love your help tagging more of our images for EOL. For more information about machine tagging, please see the instructions provided by EOL here and feel free to contact us via Flickr mail, Twitter @BioDivLibrary, or our feedback form if you have any questions.
Please note that you have to have a Flickr profile to add tags to BHL images. If you are already a Flickr member or considering becoming one, and would like to have your own images of flora and fauna harvested to EOL species pages, please see the following for more information: http://www.flickr.com/groups/encyclopedia_of_life/rules/.
Proud Parents: Watching our Flickr Mature
Since the inception of our Flickr group, there have been many project milestones, the first of which (besides actually starting the account!) was implementing a basic organizational structure. Once it was clear that BHL wanted to fully participate in the Flickr environment, staff transformed a haphazard pool of images into organized sets and collections, with sets structured around individual titles and collections around subjects and content types (like “Mammals” or “Book of the Week“). Slightly later, staff capitalized on the opportunity Flickr offered us to celebrate specific events, organizing themed collections such as Halloween or the Holiday Season.
Pagination display on BHL |
Eventually, staff realized that Flickr could help us target specific content in our collection for metadata improvement – specifically, pagination improvement. Pagination refers to the display of page numbering that you see on the left hand side of the BHL screen when viewing a book. Although very basic pagination is performed at the time of book scanning, BHL staff manually update this pagination with more helpful information such as identifying illustrations, designating articles, and embedding year and volume information. Learn more about BHL pagination in Gilbert Borrego’s post. Since those books featured on Flickr became some of the most popular in BHL, and since it was difficult to locate illustrations within these items without improved pagination, staff began to prioritize Flickr titles for pagination improvement. As of this week, all 450+ titles in Flickr have been manually paginated in BHL!
Our most recent milestone addresses one of the most common requests we’ve had regarding Flickr content. Until recently, images in Flickr only linked back to the volume level in BHL. This meant that the BHL urls associated with an image in Flickr did not link to the specific page in BHL, but instead to the “item” or book that contained the image. It was often difficult to then locate the image within the book, especially if the pagination had not yet been manually updated. Thanks to the Technical Development team at the Missouri Botanical Garden, all images in Flickr now have page-level links associated with them, allowing users to find the page within a BHL book with a single click.
This improvement came with an added benefit for BHL staff. Previously, to upload images into Flickr, staff had to first download the images from BHL, open them in Adobe Bridge to embed metadata, and then bulk upload to Flickr (more on the previous Flickr process in Gilbert Borrego’s post). Now, staff can flag illustrations directly within the BHL back-end administration portal. Software developed by the MOBOT team then automatically embeds book and page information to these images and uploads to Flickr.
For more information on the technical aspects of these improvements, see our FAQ page.
Overall, we’ve found that Flickr offers us an excellent opportunity to provide access to aspects of our content that were overlooked and under-appreciated. Reaching new audiences and demonstrating that BHL has much to offer outside the realm of taxonomy is a critical step in the growth of the project.
*All BHL images are public domain. However, Flickr does not provide a “public domain” license option. Therefore, our images are listed in Flickr as
Thanks for posting those images on Flickr.
But … for some reason the titles show as grey/white text on …. grey/white background which is awful. At least for me (on Mac Chrome). Even in Safari, its difficult to read white/grey text on often light background. Can you please change that?
http://www.flickr.com/photos/biodivlibrary/sets/
Dear Peter,
Thank you for your feedback, and we apologize for the difficulty in reading the titles on album covers in Flickr. Unfortunately, this appears to be a setting controlled by Flickr that we are unable to change. We have reached out to Flickr Support to see if there is any way to adjust the settings for font color and size, but this may be something we are unable to adjust. We apologize for the inconvenience, and thank you for your interest in our collection and images.
But here's an example of where cropping won't work:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/biodivlibrary/6505684989/in/set-72157628403496467
I would prefer that the images are tagged as accurately as possible and that hopefully we can find a way around the limitations of EOL's ingest process. These images are of use to many communities.
Some guidelines from our EOL colleagues:
"Flickr notes display only on Flickr itself. That text does not get imported to EOL. If you have plates with multiple species, you should add binomial machine tags for each of the species featured. You can also add left to right, etc. information to the image description. One thing that's important: Do not mix taxonomic levels in the machine tags when there is more than one organism represented on a plate, i.e., if you know the species for one organism and only the genus for the other, do not add a binomial tag AND a genus tag. Our harvester cannot handle this. Currently, the only way to deal with images like this is to upload them twice to Flickr and to tag each version of the image individually.
At some point, I hope people will take the initiative to crop individual images out of these plates and re-tag and re-upload them to EOL. This kind of thing is happening a lot on Wikimedia Commons."
Many thanks to all those contributing to this dialogue and for tagging our Flickr content!
Some guidelines from our EOL colleagues:
"Flickr notes display only on Flickr itself. That text does not get imported to EOL. If you have plates with multiple species, you should add binomial machine tags for each of the species featured. You can also add left to right, etc. information to the image description. One thing that's important: Do not mix taxonomic levels in the machine tags when there is more than one organism represented on a plate, i.e., if you know the species for one organism and only the genus for the other, do not add a binomial tag AND a genus tag. Our harvester cannot handle this. Currently, the only way to deal with images like this is to upload them twice to Flickr and to tag each version of the image individually.
At some point, I hope people will take the initiative to crop individual images out of these plates and re-tag and re-upload them to EOL. This kind of thing is happening a lot on Wikimedia Commons."
Many thanks to all those contributing to this dialogue and for tagging our Flickr content!