Bigdawg
Just Me
Just want to share this because it could have been me 3 years ago... I was selling the same shirt!
My husband and a friend took several pictures of a certain Speedway for the express purpose of making t-shirts. We knew that we couldn't use any of their images. We smeared out the sponsor billboards (weren't sure we could use them) and proceeded to make about 500 or so shirts using the image incorporated into our design.
We used to sell at the race - standard procedure is for TBI (TN Bureau of Investigation) to come around and check for copyright infringements. We always sweated it a little because some of our shirts are take-offs on beer and alcohol shirts, but we always made sure it was easy to see they weren't the actual brand. Operated this way for 4 years or so selling tee's that were cleared EVERY TIME by TBI as legal.
Since we no longer live up there, my friend has been selling shirts instead - using some of our mutual designs as well as one he created with a wanted poster, picture of the Speedway and "Most Wanted Ticket in Racing"... he's actually sold these for a couple races - cleared every time by TBI...
well... not this time. He left his wife and a friend at the track while he went to replenish and TBI showed up, slapped the cuffs on both of them and proceeded to start taking his whole stock of shirts. All of them. My friend made it there in time to diffuse the situation and get his wife out of cuffs, but they did take the shirts with the picture of BMS on it. Telling him how lucky he was they didn't take everything and cart them all off to jail...
Bottom line is it didn't matter that we took the picture... or anything else. Even taking a picture of the track and selling something that had the pic on it was illegal. Personally had no idea (obviously) and apparently neither did the previous TBI agents...
So... if you thought copyright law was gray before... this might tell you something...
My husband and a friend took several pictures of a certain Speedway for the express purpose of making t-shirts. We knew that we couldn't use any of their images. We smeared out the sponsor billboards (weren't sure we could use them) and proceeded to make about 500 or so shirts using the image incorporated into our design.
We used to sell at the race - standard procedure is for TBI (TN Bureau of Investigation) to come around and check for copyright infringements. We always sweated it a little because some of our shirts are take-offs on beer and alcohol shirts, but we always made sure it was easy to see they weren't the actual brand. Operated this way for 4 years or so selling tee's that were cleared EVERY TIME by TBI as legal.
Since we no longer live up there, my friend has been selling shirts instead - using some of our mutual designs as well as one he created with a wanted poster, picture of the Speedway and "Most Wanted Ticket in Racing"... he's actually sold these for a couple races - cleared every time by TBI...
well... not this time. He left his wife and a friend at the track while he went to replenish and TBI showed up, slapped the cuffs on both of them and proceeded to start taking his whole stock of shirts. All of them. My friend made it there in time to diffuse the situation and get his wife out of cuffs, but they did take the shirts with the picture of BMS on it. Telling him how lucky he was they didn't take everything and cart them all off to jail...
Bottom line is it didn't matter that we took the picture... or anything else. Even taking a picture of the track and selling something that had the pic on it was illegal. Personally had no idea (obviously) and apparently neither did the previous TBI agents...
So... if you thought copyright law was gray before... this might tell you something...