Forum Moderators: wheatpenny Forum Coordinators: Anim8dtoon
Photography F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2025 Jan 30 8:47 am)
Ah, yes - this is one subject that never fails to pop up every couple of months, and it's one of those fun ones!! Permission or not? hmmm - depends where you are, as any Frenchman would attest....tee hee I've started working on it in my own way - it's the eyes. If they look confused, scared, nonchalent - I snap. If they look aggravated / annoyed / murderous I pan to the left, pan as if I'm following something in the sky/road/water and click as I pass them......tee hee..... either that, or just click quickly, lower the camera with a very "bored photographer who's just had another shot spoiled" look on my face. That one works best. (",)
My advice Jack would be to have no doubt and to take the picture whenever-wherever-and as-soon-as you see it . Often i can get the first shot or two in before they even know i'm there... Regret sucks! so i try to avoid it.
Gosh jordy, sounds like you and i have a few things in common. My fav is to pretend im just making adjustments to my camera and to seem entirely disinterested in them. It's cruel, i know. But it's definitely the most effective. I've fooled many a mullet! At least 6 today, in fact...8)
Here's a short comment (a friend of mine sent this to me) from the website of a professional American photojournalist named Rob Miracle... Model Releases/Permission Another common question comes up is the question of what permission do I need to take or publish a photograph. Rules vary by country, but in the United States, as a rule of thumb, if you are taking a photograph for editorial purposes, such as for a news paper, or to document a story, you do not need releases. However, if the image is going to be used in an advertisement, you have to have a signed release by everyone identifiable in the photograph. Thus if you shoot the beginning of the Boston Marathon and you get the opportunity to sell the shot to Nike for a shoe ad, every runner you can see in the photo has to sign a release. The release for children is similar to the one for adults, but it written so that an adult can sign for the child. Any private property in the photograph must also be released for commercial work. On the bright side, we are journalists, and 99% of what we shoot does not need a release.
Attached Link: http://www.renderosity.com/viewed.ez?galleryid=166377&Start=19&Artist=eartho&ByArtist=Yes
Yup, we raise em tough up here in Oregon!you can see a friend of hers at the link...
Be brave, Jack
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