@n9xyp Why would I want to consult a media rights lawyer? You think I should pay hundreds of Pounds to do that so that I can answer more clearly on YouTube? One can photograph people on the streets of the UK for artistic purposes (i.e. Flickr, a gallery exhibition, a photobook) without requiring model releases. I don't understand the subtlety of your answer but I don't need to because what I said stands true.
@SuperMangn Absolutely. Film is very popular, as is the contemporary revision of the film he used (Kodak Tri-X 400). Checkout groups on Flickr like 'I Shoot Film' and 'Film Is Not Dead'. You can process colour or black & white, scan and print it yourself, or get a photo lab to do it for you.
@mdigital21 Yes you can photograph anything in public view. The problems come into play with what you do with the pictures after. Commercial speech (product endorsement, advertising) require the end user (not the photographer) have the permission of the people in the photo - a release. The people only have to recognize themselves in the photo, there is case law to support this. Applies to the United States only.
thanks for digitising this
stillben 1 month ago
@n9xyp Why would I want to consult a media rights lawyer? You think I should pay hundreds of Pounds to do that so that I can answer more clearly on YouTube? One can photograph people on the streets of the UK for artistic purposes (i.e. Flickr, a gallery exhibition, a photobook) without requiring model releases. I don't understand the subtlety of your answer but I don't need to because what I said stands true.
peteb0yd 1 month ago
@SuperMangn Absolutely. Film is very popular, as is the contemporary revision of the film he used (Kodak Tri-X 400). Checkout groups on Flickr like 'I Shoot Film' and 'Film Is Not Dead'. You can process colour or black & white, scan and print it yourself, or get a photo lab to do it for you.
peteb0yd 1 month ago
@SuperMangn He was using a leica M4. with a canon 28 f2.8 but he did used leica 28mms as well.
bene123photographer 2 months ago
What camera did he use and can you still get the photos developed in the same way now ?
SuperMangn 2 months ago
@mdigital21 i could hear it fine
ZXAnimal 3 months ago
@mdigital21 Yes you can photograph anything in public view. The problems come into play with what you do with the pictures after. Commercial speech (product endorsement, advertising) require the end user (not the photographer) have the permission of the people in the photo - a release. The people only have to recognize themselves in the photo, there is case law to support this. Applies to the United States only.
n9xyp 3 months ago
Respond to this video... wow....there is volume on a computer???
mdigital21 3 months ago
@n9xyp ANYTHING THAT CAN BE VIEWED FROM THE STREET IS FAIR GAME FOR PHOTOGRPAHY
mdigital21 3 months ago
@mdigital21 turn your shit up then
ZXAnimal 3 months ago