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WordPress is undoubtedly one of the most popular blogging platforms, so it’s no surprise that there are a huge variety of different plugins to allow you to integrate Flickr with your blog posts. This article does include a sponsored review of iFlickr, but we’ll also be looking at other plugins available to mix these two online platforms together.
By way of a basic introduction, iFlickr is a WordPress plugin that allows you to easily find free images on Flickr and insert them into your blog post while automatically putting the attribution link underneath. It can save you quite a bit of time when looking for related images to your blog post, but doesn’t satisfy the requirement you may have for putting your own personal images on your blog (we’ll cover some methods for doing this later on).
Here are some of the various bits we liked and didn’t like so much about iFlickr:
If you’re looking to use an appropriate Flickr photo with your blog posts on a regular basis, iFlickr is definitely a good way to go. However, if you’d like to mix things up in a different way, trying one of the following might be a better option:
We’d be really interested to hear about any other plugins which you find useful for integrating Flickr with your blog – drop us a line below!
wow this plugin is nice, i mostly use flickrRSS in my projects think its the easiest to use.
I’m using FAlbum on my website which looks something like this:
http://www.schreiblogade.de/gallery/
It integrates well into WordPress and is really simple to set up and doesn’t need PHP5.
You can download it at:
http://www.randombyte.net/blog/
Greetings
Great post! I love Flickr but integrating it with WP I’ve found annoying. So hopefully these will help. :D
Great!
It will be good to keep photo album on site…Thanks for prefect plugin…:)
Great post. I’m using FlickrRSS. It’s simple and very easy to set up.
Thanks for this advice. I currently use flickr to show off my web design portfolio (screenshots). I use a script with an iframe. It works fine until I edit the page and then the page editor decides it doesn’t like the iframe tag and drops it. I’ll definitely take a look at these plugins, the RSS one sounds like just the thing I need.
It’s worth to note that you need a Flickr API key in order for the iFlickr plugin to work, but you can’t get an API key from Flickr unless you’re running a commercial blog, so the plugin is useless for those of us who blog for fun!