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History of the Built Environment I (ID 108)

DI Library's guide to books, websites, and other resources for students in History I

Using Images in MLA

Labels, captions, and source information

Each image must include a label, a number, a caption, and source information. The caption describes the image and explains why you included it. Source information provides the source of the image.

Label and Number

The label and number of the image should always appear in two places:

  • In the main text of the document (e.g., see fig. 1)
  • Next to the image itself (Fig. 1)

Assign figure numbers in the order the images appear in your work.

Note: Microsoft Word makes the numbering easy. On the References tab, click Insert Caption. Word will number the captions automatically, and if you move things around later, you can easily update the numbering: select all the text, right-click, and select Update Field.

Caption

The caption comes directly after the label. If the image is a photograph of a work of art, include the artist's name, title of the artwork, and date of the artwork. The caption does not need to be a complete sentence, but it can be up to several sentences.

Source Information

This is the citation for the image. This is treated as an in-text citation and appears in parentheses at the end of the caption. If the image is from a book, the in-text citation includes the author of the book and the page number the image was found on. If the image is from a website, there are usually no page numbers. If a source does not have an author, cite the title or an abbreviated version of the title instead.

Example

Image with Label, Number, Caption, and Source Information

Red fabric with floral designsFigure 1. This Floral Canopy or Screen is a cotton fabric that shows the popular fashion in Mughal India of using flowering plant motifs and chevron borders to decorate textiles (Floral).

In this example, the caption is: 

This Floral Canopy or Screen is a cotton fabric that shows the popular fashion in Mughal India of using flowering plant motifs and chevron borders to decorate textiles

In this example, the credit line is:

(Floral)

The credit line is simply an in-text citation for the source of the image.

 

Full Citation in the Works Cited

Floral Canopy or Screen. 17th–18th century. Metropolitan Museum of Art,

https://metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/457711.

Finding Images Online

Make sure to use at websites that you can trust to identify images correctly. Most museums have high-quality images of objects in their collections with information that accurately identifies the objects, when and where they were created, and anything else that’s known about them.

Top Picks for Digital Images of Art, Decorative Arts & Interiors

Top Picks for Digital Images of Architecture