Académique Documents
Professionnel Documents
Culture Documents
Product
Fashion Spread
Theme
Gods And Monsters
Locations
Home, the meadows
Photoshoot and Fashion Spread Production Schedule
Reviewing Photographs
Post Production
Budget
Canon EOS 1100D - £499
Tripod - £20
Lights – £23.99
Computer - £500
Blazer - £15
Dress - £29
Adobe photoshop
Contingency Plans
My contingency plans are as follows
- If my camera breaks or won’t work I will use my backup day with a different camera
- I will check the battery power before I leave college, in case the batteries run out I will
bring a spare battery
- I will check the camera before I leave college to make sure that the SD card isn’t
corrupt or full
- If my subject cannot make it to our chosen day I will use a backup day, I will also ask
multiple people in case my subject drops out.
- If the shoot area is too dark I will book out a light
- To make sure I don’t forget any materials I will thoroughly plan the day before, and in
case I do forget something important I will use the backup day
The rights cover: broadcast and public performance, copying, adapting, issuing, renting and lending
copies to the public.
This means it is not a criminal offence to break the law, which could result in a fine or jail sentence.
Instead, the person who owns the copyright has to sue the person they believe has broken the law.
The case is then heard in a civil court and if the person is found guilty of breaking copyright law then
they will have to pay damages to the owner of the copyright. The amount of damages is set by the
court.
Duration of copyright
For literary, dramatic, musical or artistic works: 70 years from the end of the calendar year in which
the last remaining author of the work dies.
If the author is unknown, copyright will last for 70 years from end of the calendar year in which the
work was created, although if it is made available to the public during that time, by publication,
authorised performance, broadcast, exhibition etc, then the duration will be 70 years from the end
of the year that the work was first made available.
Sound Recordings: 50 years from the end of the calendar year in which the work was created or, if
the work is released within that time, 70 years from the end of the calendar year in which the work
was first released.
Films: 70 years from the end of the calendar year in which the last principal director, author or
composer dies.
If the work is of unknown authorship: 70 years from end of the calendar year of creation, or if made
available to the public in that time, 70 years from the end of the year the film was first made
available.
Typographical arrangement of published editions: 25 years from the end of the calendar year in
which the work was first published.
Broadcasts and cable programmes: 50 years from the end of the calendar year in which the
broadcast was made.
To avoid breaking this law I will make sure all of the materials in my fashion spread will be
original. I will make sure that only my own photos are used and will not use anyone else’s clothing
choices. I will make sure that my concepts are original and not copyrighted. I will make sure that
the background or photo does not include any copyrighted material.
Equality Act 2010
This law legally protects people from discrimination in the workplace and in wider society.
It is against the law to discriminate against anyone because of:
Age
Being or becoming a transsexual person
Being married or in a civil partnership
Being pregnant or on maternity leave
Disability
Race including colour, nationality, ethnic or national origin
Religion/belief or lack of religion/belief
Sex
Sexual orientation
I will make sure that no-one is discriminated against when working on my fashion spread photo
shoot. I will also make sure that no-one is represented in a stereotypical or discriminatory way on
my fashion spread.
Intellectual property
What intellectual property is
Having the right type of intellectual property protection helps you to stop people stealing or copying:
the names of your products or brands
your inventions
the design or look of your products
things you write, make or produce
Copyright, patents, designs and trade marks are all types of intellectual property protection. You get
some types of protection automatically, others you have to apply for.
If you believe anyone has stolen or copied your property you would sue them in civil court.
Types of protection
The type of protection you can get depends on what you’ve created. You get some types of
protection automatically, others you have to apply for.
Automatic protection
In this Act ‘article’ means any description of article containing or embodying matter to be read or
looked at or both, any sound record and any film or other record of a picture or pictures.
I will make sure there are no obscene images in my fashion spread. I will do this by making sure
nothing in my fashion spread is offensive to any group of the public.
Trespass
This is a civil law.
Trespass to land consists of any unjustifiable intrusion by a person upon the land in possession of
another.
Civil trespass is actionable in the courts.
Privacy
The introduction of the Human Rights Act 1998 incorporated into English law the European
Convention on Human Rights.
Article 8.1 of the ECHR provides an explicit right to respect for a private life:
Article 8 protects your right to respect for your private life, your family life, your home and your
correspondence (letters, telephone calls and emails, for example).
Privacy Law is a law which deals with the use of people’s personal information and making sure they
aren't intruded upon. These laws make sure people can't have their information wrongly used
without permission.
Anyone who believes their right has been broken can make a civil claim in the courts against those
they believe have invaded their privacy.
When applying the legal principles the court will balance the claimant's right to privacy against the
right to freedom of expression.
If the claimant is proved to be correct this could result in an injunction banning publication of
information; damages; and return or destruction of the material gained from the intrusion.
I will keep my model’s details private and not publish the model’s release form. I will make sure
no one is in the photos without their consent. I will also make sure no ones details are released.
The Act changed existing criteria for a successful claim, by requiring claimants to show actual or
probable serious harm (which, in the case of for-profit bodies, is restricted to serious financial loss),
before suing for defamation in England or Wales.
It also enhanced existing defences, by introducing a defence for website operators hosting user-
generated content (provided they comply with a procedure to enable the complainant to resolve
disputes directly with the author of the material concerned or otherwise remove it), and introducing
new statutory defences of truth, honest opinion, and "publication on a matter of public interest“.
LIBEL
A written, published false statement that is damaging to a person's reputation.
SLANDER
Making a false spoken statement damaging to a person's reputation.
Defamation is a civil law and so you would need to sue someone who you believe has damaged your
reputation.
I will not make fake accusations in anyway that could damage anyone’s reputation or
imply anything that could either.
Ethical Constraints
Representation and Stereotypes:
Explain what this is and why it’s an ethical issue. Identify whether it could even become a legal issue
if the line is crossed too far – what legal issue?
I will not represent any group of the public in an offensive or negative way based on their race,
sexuality, lifestyle, or anything else.