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使い方

「フォーコーナーズ」を利用すると、コンテクスト化した情報を画像の4隅に埋め込むことができます。利用者がマウスを画像の上に置くと四隅の記号が表示され各隅がクリック可能になります。

オンラインフォームを使ってあなたの「フォーコーナーズ」画像を作ることが出来ます。様々な文章やメディアを加えることが出来ます。入力フィールドを記入し終わった後、自動的にあなたのウェブサイトへコピー&ペーストが出来るコードが発生されます。

創作権を要請する

右下の隅には、あなたのキャプション、クレジット、ライセンス、経歴、そして倫理規定を入れる事が出来ます。作品販売や画像の複製の依頼があった場合のためなど、閲覧者にあなたやあなたのエージェントの連絡先を教えることも出来ます。歴史上はじめて、閲覧者が即時に写真家の倫理規定(例えば、どの程度ジャーナリズムの規則を尊重しているか、ソフトウエアを使って編集をしているか、写真を演出しているか、アーティストとしての自覚の程度など)を知る事が出来ます。

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

画像にまつわる裏話を聞かせてください。

左下の隅では、画像が撮られた時の状況について説明できます。被写体や周りの目撃者のインタビューや、閲覧者がその画像の作られた状況をより良く理解するための情報を所有する人の意見などを追加できます。

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

リンクをシェアする

左上の隅では、画像を他の画像と接続させながらコンテクスト化することができます。例えば、写された状況の前後に撮られた写真や同じ状況を映した動画、または同じ場所で別の日に撮られた写真や同じ被写体を別の場所で撮影したものなどを追加できます。

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

リンクをシェアする

右上の隅には、関連する記事やビデオ、歴史的説明、または閲覧者の画像の理解を深めるのに役立つその他の情報を含むウェブサイトへのリンクを含めることができます。

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