
Bing Images: Another way to search images is with Microsoft's Bing.
This one is ideal if you're looking specifically for GIFs or portraits.
Yahoo Image Search: The image search on Yahoo is similar to these other picture search engine sites: there are advanced search options to filter the results by license, size, color, and more. An advanced image search on Google lets you narrow your search by size, color, time, and more. You can also use Google to search for an image using another image as your search query instead of text (i.e., reverse image search). Google Images: Google's massive image database will help you find pretty much any picture on any topic that you can think of, plus it's easy to use. As far as extensions go, it's one of the cleanest and simplest ones, and it does its job as needed.Īdditionally, if, like me, you're a huge fan of custom search engines in Chrome, and you're used to manipulating URLs to get what you want, you can easily create several search engines that give you larger than or exact size searches for the resolutions and dimensions you most frequently use - your computer display(s) for example. Plus, it's open source, requires no special permissions or site access, and doesn't seem to use any resources or leave any lingering processes in the background. Otherwise, the Advanced Image Search extension does everything we want and is quickly accessible.
The only one remaining is exact size, and for that, knowing the "imagesize:" search operator seems to be the easiest solution. It's Google's official solution and will bring you back most of the missing parameters without you having to remember any tricks. If you're used to filtering down your Google Images searches and don't want to lose one or any of the options, I recommend you start by bookmarking the advanced image search site.