Resale, complicated?
#31
Power Poster
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: Lowell, MA
Posts: 14,083
The most common theme in articles about copyright infringement laws, allow you to make anything from a pattern, however, you need to acknowledge who made the original pattern; but I'm sure there are more specific informational articles on the QB that would explain it better than I just did.
#32
Super Member
Join Date: Apr 2012
Posts: 1,165
I had this come up several months ago...not a quilt but a wedding dress. A friend's dtr is getting married and asked if I would make her dress. The dtr had seen a and tried on a gorgeous dress and her mom was trying to save money. I told her I wouldn't make an exact duplicate of the dress, I could do something similar but it really wasn't going to be any cheaper as it was like 6 layer skirt and lace overlay with beading. I told her IF she could find the fabric it was still going to cost her big $$ and as her dtr is a bit of a bridezilla (I didn't say THAT) and she loved the dress she tried on, I didn't think she'd be happy with anything I did. Long winded way of saying that unless I'm making a dress from a pattern, I won't make an exact duplicate of anything. And even then I usually tweak it a bit.
Don't tell me something HAS TO look, worn, be used as you designed it. If your instructions or design is lacking, I'll simply work around it.
If I don't like darts, I'll remove them. I can draw a pattern for almost any kind of sleeve. Too bad. I'm not claiming the pattern or selling it. Personal use, one item.
#33
Member
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Southern Illinois
Posts: 33
If we are not allowed to copy a pattern in a quilt that we made for sale there would be no quilts sold. Think about the double wedding ring, the 4 patch, the 9 patch, all those old time patterns. We would not be allowed to make those and sell them. Something is wrong in Denmark. It just does not make sense. Something is wrong in those who are hollering about their pattern being made and sold. We would have to find out who first designed all these all patterns before we could sell them. It is not possible.
#35
Super Member
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Jozefow, Poland
Posts: 4,474
Copyright infringement has been discussed here several times. Each has their own opinion and then there is the law.
Edited to add: I shouldn't admit this, but I can recreate a lot of patterns using EQ or graph paper....most quilters can. I make changes to them so that I am not using a direct copy of the pattern so that I am not guilty of copyright infringement. Very often I find that the block that is the center core of the pattern is in public domain. Am I breaking the law because I start with their idea but don't end up with it? Who knows? Hope not. I understand not mass producing a pattern, but making one and raffling it, or if someone falls in love with it, letting them reimburse you for your time and expenses should be okay.
Edited to add: I shouldn't admit this, but I can recreate a lot of patterns using EQ or graph paper....most quilters can. I make changes to them so that I am not using a direct copy of the pattern so that I am not guilty of copyright infringement. Very often I find that the block that is the center core of the pattern is in public domain. Am I breaking the law because I start with their idea but don't end up with it? Who knows? Hope not. I understand not mass producing a pattern, but making one and raffling it, or if someone falls in love with it, letting them reimburse you for your time and expenses should be okay.
I, too have found that with EQ I can take a picture and recreate the pattern--and since it is usually just squares, triangles, and rectangles, I don't feel like I'm stealing either.
If it is complicated, like a Judy Neiermeyer, then, no, I couldn't begin to do that kind of thing on EQ. (Maybe someone could, but I'm not good enough yet.)
Even that "wild and goosey" block that a famous quilter designed is basically available on EQ and you can just print it in the size you need as a paper pieced block. The ones that come on EQ6 have 2, 4 and 6 geese in exactly the same layout and hers had 3, but it's pretty much the same block--just the number of geese is different.
Here's the choices that EQ 6 has on the first page of choices: [ATTACH=CONFIG]515736[/ATTACH]
So,change away...even little things and I can't see how the other person can say you took her/his idea.
Last edited by justflyingin; 04-03-2015 at 02:07 AM.
#36
Super Member
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Jozefow, Poland
Posts: 4,474
I caught hell from a designer once. I bought the pattern and tweaked it to my daughter's satisfaction for her wedding dress. Posted to a sewing forum and apparently the designer saw it . She was incensed that I took the shoulder pads out and adjusted the pattern, also for using a heavy fabric for an overskirt. However, I wasn't reselling, was for personal use, so I just ignored her.
Don't tell me something HAS TO look, worn, be used as you designed it. If your instructions or design is lacking, I'll simply work around it.
If I don't like darts, I'll remove them. I can draw a pattern for almost any kind of sleeve. Too bad. I'm not claiming the pattern or selling it. Personal use, one item.
Don't tell me something HAS TO look, worn, be used as you designed it. If your instructions or design is lacking, I'll simply work around it.
If I don't like darts, I'll remove them. I can draw a pattern for almost any kind of sleeve. Too bad. I'm not claiming the pattern or selling it. Personal use, one item.
My understanding of the sewing world is that you can't copyright clothes designs. So your designer friend who was upset--too bad--hope she feels better soon.
#37
Super Member
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Jozefow, Poland
Posts: 4,474
The most common theme in articles about copyright infringement laws, allow you to make anything from a pattern, however, you need to acknowledge who made the original pattern; but I'm sure there are more specific informational articles on the QB that would explain it better than I just did.
#38
All I can say this world is getting crazier all the time where oh where are the good old days where every one shared ----the old quilting bees where we shared patterns ,recipes garden seeds or anything we wanted to now it is all about greed and dictatorship and seems we can trust no one it is a totaly different world than the one I use to know
#39
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Winston-Salem, North Carolina
Posts: 939
Ultimately, no designer is going to come after the individual quilter who sells a quilt from their pattern or sells the pattern at a yard sale or makes a copy for a friend. They copyright protect their patterns to protect against the mass producer and against other designers. I agree with the others, there are too many free resources out there to pay $8, or evern more, for a pattern to be used once, maybe twice.
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