A Proposition
My next Big Purchase is making louder demands for attention, but it's also raising doubts. I really need to get a working copy of DigiCel, an animation line testing program, in order to get any further with my attempt to re-learn paper animation. I've got the 'student' copy, which was billed as fully operational but with a watermark – I didn't know until after downloading it that the watermark is actually a big block of opaque text that makes actually seeing the animation almost impossible. To get rid of it I need to purchase the 'key,' which runs at about $300 or so, last I checked. Normally this wouldn't be too big an impediment as I've been working steadily for more than a year, and after rent and groceries my expenses are practically nil, but I've got two (possibly three, if I find myself moving south of the border) other things poised to make a large dent in my bank account this year and an extra $300 seems more and more like something to avoid.
SO. Here's the thing. I'm going to do some sort of Animation Fundraiser ... but what? I was thinking of putting together a 'sketchbook' as numerous internet artists have done which I can then sell copies of at a fixed price. However, most of my artwork (and almost all my best artwork) is fan art; I don't know what the copyright regulations might be on that but the idea frightens me. I was also considering opening up for commissions, but my upcoming period of voluntary unemployment needs to be devoted to the production of a portfolio, and I'm already behind on gift art, so there's the guilt factor as well.
What's a poor girl to do?
SO. Here's the thing. I'm going to do some sort of Animation Fundraiser ... but what? I was thinking of putting together a 'sketchbook' as numerous internet artists have done which I can then sell copies of at a fixed price. However, most of my artwork (and almost all my best artwork) is fan art; I don't know what the copyright regulations might be on that but the idea frightens me. I was also considering opening up for commissions, but my upcoming period of voluntary unemployment needs to be devoted to the production of a portfolio, and I'm already behind on gift art, so there's the guilt factor as well.
What's a poor girl to do?
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Maybe if you just put YOUR name on the cover? Not mention anything about "Harry" and "Potter" at all? But then you'd want to put in captions....hmmmm. Dunno. Or you could just ASK for donations from your fans, such as myself. We'd be more than willing to help you!
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The question that everyone should be asking
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If you do go ahead, Discworld stuff plz. Also Coffee Pirates and suchlike, which are lovely.
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Totally Discworld stuff. And definitely some Coffee Pirates, as they are the only thing approaching originality, and some Herbert West stuff because hey! it's public domain.
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(Heh, I feel bad for not ever commenting before.)
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I'm glad you like 'em... he doesn't have half so many fans as the other things I usually draw.
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I would be willing to slip you some cash for a quick sketch or two of a guy named Leo Strauss, drawn as if he were the host of an after-school children's edu-tainment program (for a joke that's turned into a side-project...). I have photo references!
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What's a girl to do?
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(Nice photoshopping, noodledaddy.)
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I don't have a clue about copyright, but I've definitely seen people selling fannish stuff at cons.
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And also not having to re-shoot something to change the timing. I am a timing coward.
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And there MUST be a freeware/shareware bit of software to fill that niche. Or what about using an "Evaluation copy" of the software you're looking for. Or something similar, like toonboom or whatever. ORRRRRR what about setting up a photoshop export script and adjusting timing in Flash? or or or or or
there must be something.
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Copyright does not normally transcend medium boundaries. That is, drawing a picture of a scene described in a book, or writing a song about it, or making a sculpture, is usually considered an original work. This is not the case if we're talking about a comic book, or something else where you're essentially mimicking something that already exists in the same medium. So, as far as literature and copyright is concerned: Fanart=good, Fan-Fiction=bad.
The really tricky thing is Trademarks. Virtually anything can be a trademark, so long as it's immediately recognizable and unique. Titles and names are often made into trademarks, distinctive appearances of characters can be trademarked, and that's where you run into trouble.
I haven't checked, but it's probably a safe bet that Harry Potter the character has been trademarked up and down, backwards, sideways and inside out, including in some very private and uncomfortable places. His lightning-bolt scar combined with his unruly mass of black hair and glasses make him as recongizable as Superman or Mickey Mouse. Hermione less so, and Ron looks like every other gangly red-headed teenage boy, but that doesn't stop WB from trying.
Moist von Lipwig, on the other hand, is defined by his unrecognizability, making him almost impossible to trademark. The golden suit is another matter, but he's also a much less marketable property, and it's far less likely that Pratchett's publishers have trademarked every single one of his characters. Discworld's Death presents a related problem, since he looks exactly like every other grim reaper in the world, and his one distinguishing characteristic appears only in text.
Trademark law does differ between countries, but the UK, Canada and the US tend to respect one another's trademarks, and anything like Harry Potter is going to be TMed independently in every contry that has developed intellectual property laws beyond the finders-keepers stage.
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Or just set up a 'not hungry, just broke' Paypal account, and maybe make an exclusive fancy wallpaper or something for those whom donate.
It's what some of my favorite web comics do.
Coffee Pirates, exploding onto your desktop in a caffeine-induced pillaging raid. Hide your coffee and danish. Arr.
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The Composer is Dead: http://www.experienceto.com/family/composer-is-dead.shtml
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