When you receive a copyright infringement letter

If you are using or used images on your web site or in print or in any other media, without a photographer’s permission, and received a cease and desist letter/demand letter/copyright infringement letter from a photographer, his/her legal representative, from Getty Images or Corbis, here is a guide on what to do and what not to do in this case:

http://blog.seattlepi.com/timothymccormack/2012/01/26/copyright-infringement-letter-for-images-on-your-website/

Photography © Alex Maxim http://alexmaxim.ca. Unlicensed use is prohibited.

The feast photo shoot (2010)

As soon as I posted the ‘Tea party’ photo shoot I felt it’s necessary to mention its sister shoot I’ve done in 2010. Both of them have food and fashion as the main elements of the concept, but that’s probably where the similarity ends. This is one of my most favorite photo shoots to date. I love the dramatic historic feel of it. This is where fashion and fine art meet.

‘The feast’ photo shoot. Photography © 2010 Alex Maxim

Makeup: Beatrice Jean
Hair: Irina Lavrega
Model: Cait MacLachlan

Fashion photography stock archive

Photography © Alex Maxim http://alexmaxim.ca. Unlicensed use is prohibited.

Beauty in water photo shoot

Should I mention that I love water? It’s always different, magical and beautiful, especially when there is a beautiful woman lying in it. I was quite curious myself as to how far I can push it in order to create a large variety of looks, from natural to almost surreal, within just a few hours of a single shoot. Thanks to the amazing team, it went pretty far :)

Beauty in water photo shoot. Photography © 2012 Alex Maxim

Makeup/Hair/Nails: Delia Lupan
Model: Richelle Coomey

Beauty photography stock archive

Photography © Alex Maxim http://alexmaxim.ca. Unlicensed use is prohibited.

Blocking Pinterest on your web site

If you don’t want to have your work used without permission on Pinterest, you can find out why, here (read the full story): http://greekgeek.hubpages.com/hub/Is-Pinterest-a-Haven-for-Copyright-Violations and here: http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/02/07/is-pinterest-already-making-money-quietly/, use this meta tag in the header of all your web pages that you want to protect:
<meta name=”pinterest” content=”nopin” />

(WordPress: go to Appearance->Edit->Header(header.php) and place  <meta name=”pinterest” content=”nopin” />  in the next line, right after the <head> tag)

P.S.

Of course this is as ridiculous as ‘No free driving’ barrier around your car, nobody is supposed to use your photographs or touch your property without permission on the first place, but at least it will help you in the meantime, until on-line copyright protection evolves.

I can’t wait until the time when each photograph is automatically linked to it’s owner’s web site, protected from editing, and displays embedded copyright holder’s name and contact information upon mouse over, whenever it’s displayed on the Internet.

Photography © Alex Maxim http://alexmaxim.ca. Unlicensed use is prohibited.

Newspaper Copyright Infringement

The Daily Telegraph infringes copyright. Read here.

It seems to be a new trend for some editorial publishers to treat photography as a commodity and photographers as nothing but a middle man between the camera and the end user…

I really look forward to seeing our courts evolve on copyright infringement matters making it much faster and easier to protect creator’s works and settle infringement cases. There is a huge room for improvement.

I am also looking froward to seeing US copyright registration office switching to a subscription based service, which would allow registering new unpublished works on a daily basis, without paying extra and just having one reasonable annual subscription fee.

Photography © Alex Maxim http://alexmaxim.ca. Unlicensed use is prohibited.

Lady Samurai photo shoot

Lady samurai with a katana sword. Modern and vintage looks. Seductive and deadly.

Lady Samurai  photo shoot. Photography © 2012 Alex Maxim

Makeup: Beatrice Jean
Hair: Dat Salon
Model: Josie Lee

Find them at fine art photo archive

Photography © Alex Maxim http://alexmaxim.ca. Unlicensed use is prohibited.

You are publishing a book and deciding on a cover photo

You have devoted a part of your life to writing a book and now it is the time to publish it. No matter if you choose to go with an established publisher or decide to self-publish it, you need to decide on the book cover, and that’s not an easy decision to make.

A cover is what your potential first-time readers see first and make up their mind whether they want to go ahead and take a closer look. The decision is made subconsciously and is based on your reader’s taste and past experiences. A good cover can sell your book, while a bad one can greatly limit your readership.

For most people, whether they are your first-time or devoted readers, the image on a book cover will trigger imagination even before they start reading the story, and will affect the way the book is perceived.

A great book can last forever, but you need to give it a proper take off by choosing the best and relevant cover photo that entices a reader and doesn’t have any flaws, whether artistic or technical.

I am not a writer myself, but I am a photographer. And I believe, there is much we have in common.

You can find a selection of my photographs that I put aside as a separate gallery to illustrate sample book and e-book cover photos here. Or you can look through my entire photo archive here.

Have an inspirational year! And make sure your covers are as amazing as your stories!

Truly yours,
Alex Maxim

Photography © Alex Maxim http://alexmaxim.ca. Unlicensed use is prohibited.

First fashion photo shoot with a Hasselblad

After hitting the limits of my faithful Nikon D2Xs, in 2009 I finally decided to switch to medium format. After a bit of testing, the choice became clear. It has to be Hasselblad H3D-II 39.

Here is a photo from my first fashion shoot with the camera. It’s also the first photo shoot with Daisy. We worked together many time after that, and had many amazing and fun shoots. But this one photo will always be one of my most favourite ones. All the elements came out just right. The light, the mood, the model, the settings, the wind, the composition. It has some fashion and fine art elements. I sketched it prior to the shoot, but the result has beaten all my expectations.

Photo © Alex Maxim

Thanks to the camera, the photos didn’t lose any details in shadows or highlights and came out very soft and natural. I had to boost the contrast a bit, to give the photo the mood I wanted it to have.

No noise, amazingly sharp details, skin tones and tonal gradations. I don’t want to go into all the geeky stuff, but I must say that my clients who are going to use this or any other photos, I shoot with H3D, as a spread in a magazine, as a poster, a large fine art print or on a billboard, are not going to see any quality degradation even close-up. These files have enormous potential for editing, cropping and rescaling.

Since getting my Hasselblad, I haven’t shot with anything else, whether it’s a studio or a location shoot, hot or wet weather. I pay a lot of attention to detail and quality, and IMO, there is no other camera that gives better results. I had some photos printed at over 60″ on the longest side and I am more than 100% satisfied with them.

I am sure, photographers who shoot with this camera, retouchers and graphic designers, who worked with its files, know what I mean :)

More stories to come..

Alex

Featured photograph:
Artistic high fashion photo of a woman in black flying outfit 
Fashion photography by Alex Maxim

 

Photography © Alex Maxim http://alexmaxim.ca. Unlicensed use is prohibited.

It’s 2012 already and I don’t have a blog…

Can you imagine that? And to make the matter even worse, I don’t post much on social networking sites or anywhere else. I’ve been so busy working, supporting my family and adapting to the lifestyle in a new country that I completely forgot to communicate. It’s going to be my New Year’s resolution, to start posting. I will even try to cover the key events that happened since my arrival to Canada in winter 2007. And I’ll try to keep them illustrated, I am a photographer after all. Don’t expect to see many photos of myself, I am behind the camera at all times :) But there should be plenty to look at, fashion, fine art, nature, and hopefully to read about.

I’d like to thank and give a big hug to everyone who worked with me during these four years. You’ve been amazing. Hardworking and creative. Let’s do more magic together. I believe we all gained valuable knowledge and experience by working as a strong team.

Much has happened in the photo industry during these 4 years, many significant changes that brought excitement, uncertainty and frustration. Numerous companies and photographers went out of business or had to reinvent themselves. Rise and fall of stock photography. Financial crisis that resulted in budget cuts, and consequently, in lower image licensing fees. Groundbreaking technologies that left many publishers and advertising agencies wonder if they have to abandon print and switch to digital, and right after, if they should replace still imagery with motion video. Technologies that gave everyone a fair chance to be a photographer, a videographer or a self-published writer, but at the same time creating, never seen before in these industries, competition.

It seems that we’ve got all the power we need to be creative, and this year should finalize all the substantial changes that has happened. We will never get back to where we were before the changes, but the old values remain. The print is already coming back with a new force, bringing digital publications as an addition, not a replacement. Advertisers and publishers realized that motion video is not a magic pill, but it can be a valuable addition to still imagery in certain applications. A good photograph can communicate an idea in an instant, and an instant is usually all the time that potential customers are willing to give you to persuade them.

And creative talents are embracing the fact that they don’t have to be professionals anymore in order to create, to market themselves, to get noticed and be published. For most it will be a hobby, for some, a full-time job. We can’t stop crowd sourcing, but we can be distinctive from the crowd. It’s easy to follow somebody’s path and do what’s already been done, but it’s of little value to the society and to your own growth as an artist. I look forward to seeing more fresh and never-done-before ideas this year and I hope that I am not the only one who is tired of seeing artists copying each other and recreating what’s already been done over and over.

That’s been a long post. I never though I could write that much. You can kick me the next time you see me if it was boring :)

New inspirations to everyone in 2012! See you all soon. And a big thanks to you!

Alex
alexmaxim.ca

PS
Whether you like my posts or not, feel free to comment. I am open to your support and criticism. 

Photography © Alex Maxim http://alexmaxim.ca. Unlicensed use is prohibited.