This website and the Four Corners plugin are in early development.

To report problems please email fourcornersphotograph@gmail.com

Comment ça fonctionne

Utiliser Four Corners vous permet d’ajouter des informations de contextualisation afin qu’elles soient intégrées à chacun des quatre coins de votre image. Lorsqu'un usager fait bouger la souris au-dessus d’une image, les symboles Four Corners apparaissent et chaque coin est cliquable.

Vous pouvez créer votre propre image Four Corners avec notre formulaire en ligne. Il fournit des champs que vous pouvez remplir avec différents types de texte et de médias. Une fois que vous avez rempli les champs fournis, il génère automatiquement un code intégrable que vous pouvez copier et coller sur votre site.

Déclarez votre paternité

Dans le coin inférieur droit, vous pouvez afficher votre propre légende, votre crédit, votre licence, votre bio et votre code d’éthique. Vous pouvez également autoriser le lecteur à vous contacter ou à contacter votre agent pour des ventes potentielles ou des reproductions de l’image. Pour la première fois de l’histoire, le lecteur pourra immédiatement connaître le code d’éthique du photographe: dans quelle mesure il respecte les conventions du journalisme, s’il manipule l’image avec un logiciel, s’il met en scène des photographies, s’il se définit comme artiste, etc.

Related Imagery
2
Earthrise: The Story Behind William Anders' Apollo 8 Photograph Time Magazine (View on youtube.com)
Backstory
1

On Christmas Eve, 1968, at the end of an enormously turbulent year that was rife with political upheaval, astronaut Bill Anders photographed the Earth from his perch on an Apollo spacecraft. As they began the fourth of 10 orbits, a view of the planet filled one of the windows. “Oh, my God! Look at that picture over there! Here’s the Earth coming up. Wow, is that pretty!” Anders exclaimed, before photographing it, first in black and white, and then again in color. “We set out to explore the moon and instead discovered the Earth,” he later wrote.nnEarthrise, as the photograph was called, was placed on a U.S. postage stamp and is credited with inspiring Earth Day, celebrated for the first time by millions on April 22, 1970, sixteen months after Anders made the image.

Authorship
0
Caption: Earthrise was photographed by astronaut William Anders on the first human mission to the moon, Apollo 8, on Christmas Eve, December 24, 1968. It was the first time that earthlings were able to see their fragile planet hovering in space in full color, and is widely credited for sparking the environmental movement.
Credit: William Anders
About the photographer: William Anders is a former NASA astronaut, engineer, and US Air Force Major general. He is best known for being one of the three first humans to leave Earth’s orbit to circle the moon, and for his Earthrise photograph.
License: Public Domain

Racontez l’histoire de l’image

Dans le coin inférieur gauche, vous pouvez expliquer ce qui se passait lors de la création de l’image, y compris des entretiens avec les sujets de la photo ou avec des témoins de l’événement décrit, ou les points de vue de quiconque possesseur d’informations pouvant aider le lecteur à mieux comprendre les circonstances dans lesquelles la photo a été prise.

Related Imagery
2
Earthrise: The Story Behind William Anders' Apollo 8 Photograph Time Magazine (View on youtube.com)
Backstory
1

On Christmas Eve, 1968, at the end of an enormously turbulent year that was rife with political upheaval, astronaut Bill Anders photographed the Earth from his perch on an Apollo spacecraft. As they began the fourth of 10 orbits, a view of the planet filled one of the windows. “Oh, my God! Look at that picture over there! Here’s the Earth coming up. Wow, is that pretty!” Anders exclaimed, before photographing it, first in black and white, and then again in color. “We set out to explore the moon and instead discovered the Earth,” he later wrote.nnEarthrise, as the photograph was called, was placed on a U.S. postage stamp and is credited with inspiring Earth Day, celebrated for the first time by millions on April 22, 1970, sixteen months after Anders made the image.

Authorship
0
Caption: Earthrise was photographed by astronaut William Anders on the first human mission to the moon, Apollo 8, on Christmas Eve, December 24, 1968. It was the first time that earthlings were able to see their fragile planet hovering in space in full color, and is widely credited for sparking the environmental movement.
Credit: William Anders
About the photographer: William Anders is a former NASA astronaut, engineer, and US Air Force Major general. He is best known for being one of the three first humans to leave Earth’s orbit to circle the moon, and for his Earthrise photograph.
License: Public Domain

Ajouter des images associées

Dans le coin supérieur gauche, vous pouvez contextualiser votre image en la reliant à d’autres images. Par exemple, vous pouvez ajouter des photographies prises avant ou après l’événement décrit, une vidéo de la scène, une image comparative telle que celle prise au même endroit à un autre moment, ou une photo de la même personne dans d’autres circonstances.

Related Imagery
2
Earthrise: The Story Behind William Anders' Apollo 8 Photograph Time Magazine (View on youtube.com)
Backstory
1

On Christmas Eve, 1968, at the end of an enormously turbulent year that was rife with political upheaval, astronaut Bill Anders photographed the Earth from his perch on an Apollo spacecraft. As they began the fourth of 10 orbits, a view of the planet filled one of the windows. “Oh, my God! Look at that picture over there! Here’s the Earth coming up. Wow, is that pretty!” Anders exclaimed, before photographing it, first in black and white, and then again in color. “We set out to explore the moon and instead discovered the Earth,” he later wrote.nnEarthrise, as the photograph was called, was placed on a U.S. postage stamp and is credited with inspiring Earth Day, celebrated for the first time by millions on April 22, 1970, sixteen months after Anders made the image.

Authorship
0
Caption: Earthrise was photographed by astronaut William Anders on the first human mission to the moon, Apollo 8, on Christmas Eve, December 24, 1968. It was the first time that earthlings were able to see their fragile planet hovering in space in full color, and is widely credited for sparking the environmental movement.
Credit: William Anders
About the photographer: William Anders is a former NASA astronaut, engineer, and US Air Force Major general. He is best known for being one of the three first humans to leave Earth’s orbit to circle the moon, and for his Earthrise photograph.
License: Public Domain

Partager des liens

Related Imagery
2
Earthrise: The Story Behind William Anders' Apollo 8 Photograph Time Magazine (View on youtube.com)
Backstory
1

On Christmas Eve, 1968, at the end of an enormously turbulent year that was rife with political upheaval, astronaut Bill Anders photographed the Earth from his perch on an Apollo spacecraft. As they began the fourth of 10 orbits, a view of the planet filled one of the windows. “Oh, my God! Look at that picture over there! Here’s the Earth coming up. Wow, is that pretty!” Anders exclaimed, before photographing it, first in black and white, and then again in color. “We set out to explore the moon and instead discovered the Earth,” he later wrote.nnEarthrise, as the photograph was called, was placed on a U.S. postage stamp and is credited with inspiring Earth Day, celebrated for the first time by millions on April 22, 1970, sixteen months after Anders made the image.

Authorship
0
Caption: Earthrise was photographed by astronaut William Anders on the first human mission to the moon, Apollo 8, on Christmas Eve, December 24, 1968. It was the first time that earthlings were able to see their fragile planet hovering in space in full color, and is widely credited for sparking the environmental movement.
Credit: William Anders
About the photographer: William Anders is a former NASA astronaut, engineer, and US Air Force Major general. He is best known for being one of the three first humans to leave Earth’s orbit to circle the moon, and for his Earthrise photograph.
License: Public Domain