17th century cartoon which mocks profiteering medical fees:
"How merrily we live that doctor's be,
We humbug the public and pocket the fee."

Published 1791
Pueblo woman with olla pot, postcard, 1902 New Mexico

Uploads from the British Museum edit

Test on etchings https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/search?keyword=manuscript&technique=etching&image=true&view=list&sort=object_name__asc. These are being added to Category:Prints in the British Museum.

Should you have any special requests for British Museum images on the collections website, please ensure they are clearly all public domain and can be found by a search like the above, and add your suggestion to User talk:Copyfraud and it will probably be looked at within a few days.

Collections edit

  1. Manuscripts using "technique" [1]
  2. Utagawa Kuniyoshi using "keywords" [2]
  3. Book illustrations in the British Museum using "object" <=1599
  4. Satirical prints in the British Museum [3]
  5. Prints of American peoples in the British Museum <=1924
  6. Trade-cards in the British Museum <=1899
  7. Chromolithographs in the British Museum <1900
  8. Flemish prints in the British Museum <1900
  9. Eroticism in the British Museum <1910
  10. Coloured lithographs in the British Museum <=1900
  11. Drawings on vellum in the British Museum < 1900

Notes edit

Some records will match image=true without an image being available, for example https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/object/A_2008-3037-02401 states the image is not available yet and https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/object/P_Heal-67-260 states there are no images available and does not include any image links.

Testing for poor results includes:

  • Any pre-existing matches to accession number
  • Identical duplicates
  • Date of production starts with year > 1950, which should avoid most derived modern works like this telephone card

Sadly, the British Museum have not released the archive quality full resolution scans, but have chosen to only release images capped at a maximum length of 1600px. For example, File:Sangoku yoko zue 三国妖狐図会 (The Magic Fox of Three Countries) (BM 2008,3037.07005 1).jpg is available to the public at 1,154 × 1,600 pixels however the EXIF data shows the original scan is 4,761 × 6,602 pixels. The BM website zoom feature appears to only be a way of looking at the 1600px version and does not use the original size scan (the viewing frame pulls in this image using the name prefix "huge_" from media.britishmuseum.org).

Images are named in the format:

<title or object types> (BM <accession number> <optional image sequence>).jpg

Where there are multiple sequences of images of the same museum object, all later images link back to the first image with no sequence number in the other versions parameter.
For example File:Kanadehon Chushingura (BM 1973,0723,0.28 11).jpg links back to File:Kanadehon Chushingura (BM 1973,0723,0.28).jpg which itself then lists all eleven other connected images in the "File usage on Commons" section of the image page.