darekstudio wrote:
When I'm following photos on Facebook or Instagram many of these photos does beautiful signature on it ,with name of artist or name of Studio, I setup my to camera 4 copy rights protection, but how I can install my logo on photo ? do I need special software to do it?
I'm not talking about watermarks.... âº
Signature or watermark... That's "six of one, or half dozen of the other". They're essentially the same thing, serve the same purpose and are applied in the same way.
"Watermark":
"Signature":
Either needs to be added in post-processing, and that can be done with many different software programs. If you want something free... download, install and use FastStone Photo Resizer (
http://faststone.org/FSResizerDetail.htm). In the "advanced" area, there's option to add a watermark to one or more images. It also allows you to scale it up or down to some extent, control its transparency and indicate where you want to position it on the image. FastStone is able to do this and many other things to large batches of images at one time. Before it was possible to add watermarks in Lightroom, I used FastStone to make thumbnails with watermarks added for use in online galleries. It's quick, too. I often processed several hundred images through it at a time. It also can rename, add frames and drop shadows to images, and much more. Experiment with it.
HOWEVER, for either a signature or watermark you will first need to create a digital file in some other software for FastStone to use. Any program that can work with an existing logo or create something with type and artwork of your choosing AND is able to save it as a "PNG" file will work. PNG is necessary to be able to have a "clear" background (JPEGs and GIFs won't work in most cases).
Notice that I created mine in gray, with a white outline on the watermark or the signature in white with a drop shadow added. This allows both of them to be used against virtually any background, since you never know what you may need with photos. In both cases, they were made semi-transparent when added to the image, allowing some of the original image to show through, to be less "intrusive" and more difficult to remove.
But, probably the very "best" protection you can give your images is to limit the size to no more than 500 to 700 pixels on the long side, which is large enough to display the image pretty well, but too small for many uses. I NEVER post very large images anywhere online.
I also see a lot of my images "stolen" and displayed on Facebook, etc. Notice that my watermark is designed to serve as an advertisement of sorts, potentially directing folks to my online photo galleries (the above example is an old, now defunct gallery site). It's not worth pursuing copyright infringements that are very low value misuse, such as sharing an image on Facebook. Rather than trying to stop that, I now actually encourage it and just make sure my watermark is in place and can act as an advertisement.
Another protection is to register your copyright with the US Copyright Office. That's not free, but you can register literally thousands of images in a batch, in which case it can work out to mere pennies per-image. To maximize the value of its protection, registration MUST be done "within 90 days of first publication", which basically means any display of the image online or anywhere else. Registration doesn't prevent theft of images, but it does GREATLY increase your potential recourse pursuing fair compensation for any infringements. Unregistered images, you can only go after "market value" compensation for the usage (which isn't very much if it's just a private party displaying your image without permission). You can only do that in small claims court, without legal representation since you can't recover any of your legal costs. For misuse of registered images, on the other hand, you can sue in Federal Court for market value compensation, recovery of legal expenses, as well as several types of penalties that can add up to many thousands of dollars.
You don't "copyright your images".
Your images are "intellectual property", and your "copyrighted ownership" of them is automatically created the moment you click the shutter (except in a few specific instances, such as work for hire or staff photography). It's then just a matter of protecting your image from any use without your express approval, as best you can. There are legal firms that specialize in intellectual property and with a strong case that involves significant misuse of registered images, they may work on a contingency basis (paid by the infringing party, little or no money out of your pocket). Those lawyers usually won't consider a case with unregistered images, and you'll have to pay any costs involved out of your own pocket.
Ownership of the copyright remains yours for life, unless you sell it or give it away. An image may have multiple uses now or in the future, and it can be difficult to predict what future value might be. For that reason, most usage of images is done under licensing that doesn't transfer ownership and sets limits on when, where and how the images can be used. For example, some years ago I worked with a photographer who made a single, very well known historical image, while he was a staff photographer at a newspaper. When he left the newspaper, they very graciously gave him their copyright for that image to him. Subsequent licensed sales of it were worth millions that put his kids through college and made for a considerably more comfortable retirement! Another photographer I know sells a ton of his work via stock and has licensed some of his images multiple times over the years, adding up to 6 figure dollar amounts for certain individual images.
So... It can pay to protect your images. You never know how much value they might have in the future!
BTW, copyright law changed around 1999 or so... It's no longer necessary for a watermark or signature to include the © symbol or the year. To serve as protection, a signature or watermark merely needs to be something unique. Also, with digital images copyright info is recorded in the EXIF metadata, embedded in the image. It sounds as if you have your camera set up to automatically record some of this... but I'd recommend checking the EXIF. I add a number of copyright-related things to my images' EXIF with Lightroom automatically during import. ALSO, very important, never "save for the web" when you are finishing and sizing images to upload. That strips off EXIF data to save a tiny bit of bandwidth... but also defeating some of your protections. AND, if someone misusing your properly REGISTERED images removes protections such as the watermark, signature or EXIF, the court has the option to award you penalties of up to $30,000 per instance of removal!