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Old 02-21-2013, 07:25 PM
  #12  
Scissor Queen
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Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Southwest Kansas
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Originally Posted by dunster
When it comes to copyright, it's dangerous to try to compare one thing with another. Patterns or designs for articles of clothing fall outside copyright laws. Lists of ingredients for making food (the major part of a recipe) can't be copyrighted either. Applying common sense to copyright is often an exercise in futility.

Yet, I think copyright is very easy to understand in regards to quilting. Don't copy someone's original work. Don't make copies of any published/printed pattern without written permission from the copyright holder. (If it's published somewhere, it's automatically under copyright protection.) Technically you're also supposed to get the copyright holder's permission to display a quilt made from her pattern, but that is seldom done except for major quilt shows. (I think it's unlikely that the copyright holder would complain about the display of a quilt made from her pattern, as long as you give her credit for the design.) That's about it.
The envelope art work and the written instructions in clothing patterns are copyright-able.

However, there is absolutely nothing in copyright law about getting permission to display a quilt you made with a pattern you purchased.
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