Copyright or copywrong?

A word about business, today on Speedlighter.ca. About contracts and rights, specifically. Copyright. I am not a lawyer, but as a photographer, I feel that “copyright” is an important concept.

For most shoots, the photographer retains the copyright of the images. Hire a wedding shooter, for instance, or a commercial photographer, and the small print will invariably say that this shooter “owns” the images.

Why?

Having copyright means the photographer determines what can be done with the work.

If there is no specific agreement to restrict the photographer’s copyright, that copyright rests with the photographer. In some jurisdictions you may need to “do” something to register copyright; in many (like Canada, as I understand it) that is less necessary.

The photographer having copyright enables cheaper pricing in two ways:

  • The photographer can potentially re-use the images;
  • If the agreement prohibits commercial use by the client or allows use only in a specified geographic area, or for a limited time, then the price can be lower).

This is the case in any commercial shoot (even when you have portraits made at a commercial studio, or, as said, by a wedding photographer).

If, however, the client can determine the use of the photos, that then gives that client de facto copyright over the photos. In that case, no way exists to lower the price by limiting commercial use, say. Another problem is that in that case, the photographer might not be able to show the pictures as part of his or her portfolio. Or even show them to the processing lab for printing. Or even fix them up in Photoshop. Or make a “photographer selection” of good or bad images! So this opens several potential issues, and a detailed contract would have to be drawn up restricting and granting the photographer’s specific rights. Unforeseen situations would make this a rather complex process.

So the complexity goes up and the cost rises. This is why normally, a shoot where the client owns the copyright (and it does happen, of course – as in the case of a “shooter for money”) necessitates the following:

  • Client does the post work;
  • Detailed agreement as to photographer rights;
  • Significantly higher price – normally at least double, often more.

So instead of doing this, it is often easier to put some restriction in an agreement. For instance, in a boudoir shoot it is usual for the photos not to be shared. The copyright still rests with the photographer, but he or she can agree to not share the pictures except under some agreed circumstances (e.g. after permission in writing, or in only certain ways).

Of course this is not legal advice – to get that, go see a lawyer. But it is advice to the effect that you need to think about who owns your images’ copyright, and you need to be explicit about this. Rights exists under the law-  they are someone’s – and you might as well be explicitly clear about this. Hiding the issue of who owns what right never solves anything; rather, it sets you up for problems later.

And that is why, as a photographer, you need a written agreement.

 

Last Tango in Mono

A reminder for those of you who live in the Toronto area and who want to learn all about flash and creative light: the last ever Mono workshop is on Saturday, 23 April, and there are just two spots left.

This workshop, in the country home I am leaving at the end of this month, teaches you first the technical points, and then Joseph Marranca and I help you put those into practice. So you will learn – plus you go back with actual portfolio shots that you have made – like these, from previous workshops:

Angry Jump

Angry Jump

All of these were shot “as is”, and minimal processing has been done. The shots were made in the camera, not in post. The one thing they have in common is that they use creative light.

Burying a dead lover

Burying a dead lover

Smoke machine, gels, white balance: all doable once you know how.

Hitchcock! - Shot by Joseph Marranca and Michael Willems, Mono, Ontario, 2010

Hitchcock!

That was a “broad daylight” shot, above.  Shot with just speedlights. Yup, that is what creative light can do.

Lit Runner - Shot by Joseph Marranca and Michael Willems, Mono, Ontario, 2010

Lit Runner

Cross lighting – wonderful, no?

Pensive Girl - Shot by Joseph Marranca and Michael Willems, Mono, Ontario, 2010

Pensive Girl

Looks photoshopped? Nope. Just exposed well and lit well. Simple once you know, and that is what these workshops are all about.

Umbrella Girl - Shot by Joseph Marranca and Michael Willems, Mono, Ontario, 2010

Umbrella Girl

The shot above was another daylight shot, nice day, no rain – but as it happens, we had a garden hose.

Hummer threat - Shot by Joseph Marranca and Michael Willems, Mono, Ontario, 2010

Hummer threat

We have shot Hummers, Horses, and indeed also a Harley:

Harley Chick - Shot by Michael Willems and Joseph Marranca, Mono, 2010

Harley Chick

Those are just a few of the shots we did in past workshops – and Saturday’s will be a very special one. Think “wakeboarder” and “green screen”.

If you have always wanted to learn flash and then learn how to apply it both practically and creatively, book now and come to Mono.

Of course we will do more workshops going forward, but they will no longer be in Mono – one of the most amazing settings you will ever shoot in. Two spots left, and we will not allow more in, since the student-teacher ratio is very important to us. This is not a “20 people, one instructor” workshop (rather, it is “no more than 10 students, and two pro instructors”).

See you Saturday – and others, you will see a few shots here later.

 

BREAKING NEWS

MAJOR BREAKING PHOTOGRAPHY NEWS: BBC Reports that Sendai-based Nikon is to suspend all SLR production for one year, following the earthquake/tsunami.

(Better buy that SLR right now, IF you can still find it in the stores. I’ve seen lineups at Henrys in Oakville and Mississauga.)

….
FOOTNOTE: I would have thought the lineups and the date would have tipped people off! Glad to say Nikon will weather the storm fine, folks. Although – grain of truth: some production is indeed halted temporarily.

An Admin Note from Speedlighter

Hi there friends,

Michael here.

I thought it is be time for a quick admin note for new readers, this morning (morning for me: my readers are everywhere from Japan to Canada. My Japanese friends, my thoughts are with you. I know Sendai and I am so sorry to see the devastation in Japan – and so impressed by the stoicism of the Japanese people).

Anyway. A few words about this resource.

  • What it is: Speedlighter.ca is your prime resource for photography training. As you may know, I, the speedlighter, am one of North America’s premier educators and speedlight users. I teach at Henry’s school of Imaging and I teach at www.cameratraining.ca – speedlighter is my way of helping spread knowledge. From basics to state-of-the-art technical knowledge.
  • Frequency: I aim to do at least one post a day. I have been able to do this since I started this resource in 2009. This brief, to-the-point article each day educates, trains, gives you a tip, or explains a technique or technology. I aim at everyone from experienced pros to total beginners. You can search through all previous posts – I urge you to read them all.
  • More posts: If I do any “admin” notes like this, they are in addition to, not instead of, the teaching post.
  • Cost: Speedlighter is free, and will remain so. (You can always contribute at http://www.michaelwillems.ca/Payments.html, and I would appreciate this greatly, but this is purely optional and you will not see me begging and talking about my kids here all the time).

Due to “registration spam”, which started to arrive every 10 seconds through the day, I have recently had to shut off registration for emails, but I will get this back again soon. Stand by.

A note for Toronto-area readers:

I have spots open for two workshop courses this weekend: “The Art of Photographing Nudes” on 2 April and my all-new “Event Photography” on 3 April, both in Mono, Ontario. “Advanced Creative Lighting” is also still open, for 23 April. These are the last ever Mono workshops, so do it while you can. Go here to book. (And as of next month, “Events” will be taught via Henry’s School of Imaging as a Michael Willems special: stay tuned).

A note for Oakville readers:

I might need an assistant for a shoot tomorrow afternoon, Tuesday, in Oakville. Around noon-3pm-ish, all around Oakville, lifestyle portraits of a politician. This does not pay  much for me (and hence for the assistant) but it would be a great opportunity to hone your skills. I would need someone who knows about photography, but of course I teach while we shoot, so you do not need to be a fully trained pro. Interested? Then email me. Postscript: it looks like this is filled – the power of the Internet! Tony, you are on. Meet you at noon, location to be confirmed.

And now, back to regular programming. Go out and shoot!

Preparing

I am preparing for several courses, including the special version of my signature “Advanced Flash” workshop. which you may recall I teach in Henry’s School of Imaging location in Toronto on March 19 with Special Guest Star David Honl (Yes, the David Honl).

Dave is doing this in Canada for one day only – sign up now!).

I am also preparing more runs of my new signature course “Event Photography”, which I ran Sunday and will run at Henry’s School of Imaging as a featured course repeatedly, starting soon-  stay tuned.

And this brings me to “preparing”. One of the subjects I teach in all my courses is how to prepare. Preparation is half the work. Preparation takes time but it guarantees great results. Doing it on the fly is less successful and more stressful.

So today’s tip: create checklists per situation. Three of them:

  1. An event preparation checklist. This has names, addresses, parking details, shots you must get, etc.
  2. A gear checklist. This contains all the equipment you need for that event.
  3. A day-of-shoot checklist. This needs to contain names of people to shoot; moments to expect; shots you must not forget; camera settings for situations you expect; behavioural stuff; tech things to remember: everything you need to remember on the day. You carry this in duplicate – like everything else important.

Do you have those yet? If not, here’s your homework: go do it, make three checklists for a typical event you shoot. Questions welcome (and wait for my article on this in the June issue of Canada Photo Life magazine).

Ask not what speedlighter can do for you…

…okay, that is cheesy. But I just thought I would point out that I would like my message to go out widely, and that if you like this daily teaching blog, you can help:

  • Click on the “share” link under a post to share it on Facebook, etc.
  • Tell your friends.
  • Link to the blog or to posts you like.
  • Read comments; Comment yourself; and comment on other comments.

Shukran jazeelan! (That means “thank you very much” in Arabic).

The party of the first part….

…shall be known as the “Party of the First Part”. The party of the second part shall be known as the “Party of the Second Part”. The party of the third part shall be known as the “Party of the Third Part”. The party of the fourth part shall be known as the “Party of the Fourth Part”.

Recognize that from “A Day at the Races” by the Marx Brothers? Kudos. And  I bring this up because it’s all about signing contracts.

Why am I talking about the need to sign contracts?

Because as a photographer, even if you are a committed amateur, you will be asked to shoot something for someone sometimes. Something that is important enough to them to ask you to do it.

And unless you create some form of formal written agreement, that’s where the confusion and misunderstandings can come in.

Huh? How so? I shoot some pics, they are happy. Right? I deliver pics. Couldn’t be easier.

Wrong. You shoot some pics, you say? Well, then:

  • How many photos?
  • Do you get to choose which ones to share?
  • When will you be there?
  • Who has copyright?
  • When will you deliver?
  • Candid or formal?
  • Can you use the images?
  • Can they be resold by you?
  • Can they be resold by your client?
  • Do prints cost money?
  • Are files print-sized?
  • How much post work will you do?
  • How long are the files available for?
  • Do you have backup?
  • What if the client does not pay?
  • What if the pics are destroyed accidentally?
  • What if you get sick?

So those are just a few of the things you need to make contractually sure are agreed between you and your client, relative or friend.

So I recommend you have a standard agreement, i.e. some form of contract, that you use as a way to agree these things explicitly. So that nothing is left to confusion.

Signing this is a good idea.

(And you do not, like Hammurabi, need to use cuneiform. A fountain pen will work. And who was Hammurabi? Google is your friend!)

Christmas gifts – there is still time…

… to buy your significant other a custom training course.

A three-hour individual one-on-one course with me is not only affordable and fun: it is also useful, because you will see your photographic skills visibly improve, and get sooo much more out of your camera. So if you are stuck wondering what to buy last minute: a certificate for a course, usable any time, may be just the ticket. If so, plenty of time to act – contact me today.

Or if you are like me, you do this Christmas eve at 4pm. That is when I shall be doing my shopping.

Shameless

A shameless promo (but only as the second post of the day, never worry).

You see, I do photography for a living – shooting and teaching. And a few recent shoots have reminded me how few people have proper headshots done. So I aim to change that.

My offer: I will do your executive headshot (like the example below, of my assistant in yesterday’s shot) for the special price when you see when you click on the “Special Winter Pricing” ad on the right. This “turn-key” deal includes shooting on location, the large, print sized photographer choice files (at least four) with an unlimited license to use them, and post-production on these.

But for readers of this blog who live near Toronto I do two additional things.

  1. I take an additional 10% off if you quote this blog post.
  2. While I do your headshot, I explain exactly what I am doing and how I am doing it, so it becomes a lesson as well as a professional picture for your blog, resume, web site, or wall.

If you are interested, email me (michael@mvwphoto.com) and let’s plan the date real soon.

Oh, and to give you some idea of what is involved: apart from the top quality equipment and, well, me, there’s also the setup, a car full of it:

Portable four-light studio

I cannot (much as I would like to!) promise an able assistant with a master’s degree in Economics for every shoot, but I can pretty much guarantee all the rest!