Firstly, sanity check:
- Image is a subspace of $\Bbb R^3$ and so it cannot have four vectors. I assume that you're saying that you get $4$ linearly independent vectors, even then, it clearly fails to make sense as the dimension of the image space is atmost $3$.
So, you're not quite right. Notice that the image is the column space of the matrix of transformation (compute that!) , but clearly, $\begin{bmatrix} 1 \\ 1 \\ 0 \end{bmatrix},\begin{bmatrix} 0 \\ 0 \\ 1 \end{bmatrix}, \begin{bmatrix} 1\\ 0 \\ 1\end{bmatrix},\begin{bmatrix} 0\\ 1 \\ 0\end{bmatrix}$ are not linearly independent.
Now, you need to compute a basis for the image. Since the four column vectors there span the image, and already $(1,1,0)$ is a linear combination of the others, you can drop that and still the span of the rest of the vectors would be the image. But, the other three are linearly independent. So, they form a basis for your image.
In general, the basis for the image space can be obtained from columns of the matrix in the row-reduced echelon form.
$\begin{bmatrix} 1&0&1&0 \\ 1&0&0&1 \\ 0&1&1&0\end{bmatrix} \sim \begin{bmatrix} 1&0&1&0 \\ 0&0&-1&1\\ 0&1&1&0\end{bmatrix}$
From here, it is obvious that $C_3=C_1+C_2-C_4$ and that $C_1, C_2$ and $C_4$ are linearly independent. Thus, $\mathcal{B}= \{C_1, C_2, C_4\}$ form a basis for the image; indeed $\mathcal{B}$ is the standard basis for $\Bbb{R^3}$.
Notice further that the basis we have obtained are in fact different from the one we obtained before.
For more on finding a basis for Column space, refer to: Wikipedia
To check your matrix of transformation, hover below:
The matrix of the linear transformation is: $m(g)=\begin{bmatrix}1 &0&1&0\\1&0&0&1\\0&1&1&0 \end{bmatrix}$
Additional related exercises:
- See my answer here [It might be nice to spend time to see why the linked exercise actually is related to my observations here.]