Another copyright question
#1
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Join Date: Mar 2011
Posts: 29
Another copyright question
I've been making disappearing four patch blocks lately. Today, I wondered what it would look like on point, so I cut the corners off so the "middle cross" now becomes corner to corner "X". It would be easy to do by making an hourglass block and cutting it like the D4P. I thought I had come up with something unique but googled "disappearing hourglass". Bad idea as there is another block by that name. I googled "Disappearing half square triangle" and danged if someone hadn't already thought of it And she copyrighted it under the name "Arrowhead". From what I could find, she uses some kind of stack method, not the recutting like D4P. And then someone else made a similar block called a "Disappearing four patch with a twist". She didn't copyright hers but started it like the D4P and then made diagonal cuts instead of horizontal.
Here's where I am confused on what exactly the first designer copyrighted. According to the copyright information I found at modern quilt guild: ", but if the original quilter’s work is still recognizable in your version, it’s a derivative." I recognized "Arrowhead" immediately as being a derivative of D4P. So is the copyright on the block itself or the technique used to make the block?
Here's where I am confused on what exactly the first designer copyrighted. According to the copyright information I found at modern quilt guild: ", but if the original quilter’s work is still recognizable in your version, it’s a derivative." I recognized "Arrowhead" immediately as being a derivative of D4P. So is the copyright on the block itself or the technique used to make the block?
Last edited by QuiltnNan; 06-08-2018 at 02:23 AM. Reason: remove shouting/all caps
#4
In almost every case the copyright claim on a pattern is for the pattern itself (the words and illustrations), not for the design of the quilt or block, and not for the name given to the quilt, block or pattern. A technique can't be copyrighted. The copyright only means you can't make copies of the pattern, not that the quilt or block design is original.
#6
#7
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2017
Location: Gilbert, AZ
Posts: 985
Leah Day recently interviewed a copyright lawyer who happens to be a quilter and posted it on YouTube. Very helpful! She debunks a lot of the copyright scare put out by some of the designers. The written instructions are copyrighted and can't be sold as your own. About making a copy of a magazine or other pattern...usually if it's for your personal use it is okay. Selling or giving away copies to friends isn't. Just like copying music or movies.
#9
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Join Date: Dec 2012
Posts: 1,857
The only time you MIGHT get into trouble is if you photocopied the pattern in large amounts and sold them as your design. It would be an extremely rare occurrence to even get in trouble for making an item from a pattern and selling it (you would have to be selling a huge amount to even be noticed). It is a courtesy and good form to give credit to the pattern maker if you are making their items - but it is not technically required. Most of us who make something we have seen on pinterest or in a magazine have put our own twists to it, be it color choices, small changes, something that has made it our own. And, lets say you were making and selling hundreds of an item that you originally saw somewhere and that person happened to see it. It would be on them to show that you actually took their idea or pattern to use. I would say that would be close to impossible to prove.
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