Help please!
dkoyanagi
Registered Users Posts: 656 Major grins
Holy cow! I just received an email from a design manager at Avalon Publishing saying they want permission to use one of my photos for the cover of one of their books! :barbWooohooo!
My question is, what is my next step? How should I transact this? Is Smugmug digital download good enough? The email says they require a hi res file. Is there a standard format or should I ask them what they require?
Any help you can provide would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks
Update: The photograph in question was taken at a museum, and I recall seeing a sign that says photography is permitted for non-commercial use only. Crap. Oh well, it was fun while it lasted. Please ignore this post.
Updte2: I checked the museum web site and commercial photography is allowed as long as one gets permission first and pays a fee. I'll check to see if I can do this after the fact or if I need to reshoot.
My question is, what is my next step? How should I transact this? Is Smugmug digital download good enough? The email says they require a hi res file. Is there a standard format or should I ask them what they require?
Any help you can provide would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks
Update: The photograph in question was taken at a museum, and I recall seeing a sign that says photography is permitted for non-commercial use only. Crap. Oh well, it was fun while it lasted. Please ignore this post.
Updte2: I checked the museum web site and commercial photography is allowed as long as one gets permission first and pays a fee. I'll check to see if I can do this after the fact or if I need to reshoot.
0
Comments
It all comes down to communication and not assuming anything and don't try to not look "dumb". Go ahead and ask if you don't what they are talking about. Many times, they may be using company specific terminology that just needs translating into human speak hehehe. Once you are all on the same page and speaking the same language, then the chances for success go way way up :-)
"Failure is feedback. And feedback is the breakfast of champions." - fortune cookie
http://www.chrislaudermilkphoto.com/
Thanks for your help. After consideration and looking at the museum's photograph agreement I think I'm going to let the publisher deal directly with the museum.
The museum places restrictions on how images of their artifacts can be used. The applicant must agree that the photos will not be used in a manner that disrespects or misrepresents the culture that the artifact comes from (Native American in this case). I really don't feel comfortable signing such an agreement when I don't know how the publisher is going to use my photograph. I think the publisher should sign the agreement rather than me.
What do you think? Am I making a big deal out of nothing, or do I have reason to be concerned?
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