You are on page 1of 8

Production Process Plan Fashion spread

Photoshoot and Fashion spread Production

Photograph Date Time Materials Equipment Personnel


Front cover 1 13/05/19 12:00 Brown jumper DSLR, Lights, Ben, Luke
Tripod
Front cover 2 14/05/19 16:00 Brown bomber DSLR, Lights, Ben, Luke
jacket Tripod
Front cover 3 15/05/19 16:00 Green coat DSLR, Lights, Ben, Luke
Tripod
Front cover 4 16/05/19 16:00 Black summer DSLR, Lights, Ben, Luke
coat Tripod

Reviewing Materials

Materials Date for reviewing and selecting images


Fashion spread 1 14/05/19

Fashion spread 2 15/05/19

Fashion spread 3 16/05/19

Fashion spread 4 17/05/19

Post Production

Magazine Page Date Time Materials Equipment


Fashion spread 27/05/19 09:00am Photographs Computer,
1 Photoshop

Fashion spread 27/05/19 13:00pm Photographs Computer,


2 photoshop

Fashion spread
3 28/05/19 09:00am Photographs Computer,
Photoshop
Fashion spread
4
28/05/19 13:00pm Photographs Computer,
Photoshop
Budget
Canon EOS 4000D DSLR Camera Body with 18-55mm Lens - £299.00p
Safeco Professional Digital Camera Tripod Stand Mount Holder Aluminium - £6.98p
Photoshop CS6 - £16.24p
Lenovo V530S-07ICB 10TX Intel Core i5 4GB RAM 1TB HDD Win 10 Pro Desktop PC -
£454.70p
Total -
Relevant legal and ethical issues

. Legal and Ethical Constraints


Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988
The law gives the creators of literary, dramatic, musical, artistic works, sound
recordings, broadcasts, films and typographical arrangement of published editions,
rights to control the ways in which their material may be used.

The rights cover: broadcast and public performance, copying, adapting, issuing,
renting and lending copies to the public.

This is a CIVIL law not a CRIMINAL law.

This means it is not a criminal offence to break the law, which could result in a fine or
jail sentence.

Instead, the person who owns the copyright has to sue the person they believe has
broken the law. The case is then heard in a civil court and if the person is found
guilty of breaking copyright law then they will have to pay damages to the owner of
the copyright. The amount of damages is set by the court.

Types of work protected

Literary
Song lyrics, manuscripts, manuals, computer programs, commercial documents,
leaflets, newsletters and articles etc.
Dramatic
Plays, dance etc.
Musical
Recordings and score.
Artistic
Photography, painting, sculptures, architecture, technical drawings/diagrams, maps,
logos.
Typographical arrangement of published editions
Magazines, periodicals, etc.
Sound recording
May be recordings of other copyright works, e.g. musical and literary.
Film
Video footage, films, broadcasts and cable programmes.
The Copyright (Computer Programs) Regulations 1992 extended the rules covering
literary works to include computer programs.

Duration of copyright

For literary, dramatic, musical or artistic works: 70 years from the end of the
calendar year in which the last remaining author of the work dies.
If the author is unknown, copyright will last for 70 years from end of the calendar
year in which the work was created, although if it is made available to the public
during that time, by publication, authorised performance, broadcast, exhibition etc,
then the duration will be 70 years from the end of the year that the work was first
made available.
Sound Recordings: 50 years from the end of the calendar year in which the work
was created or, if the work is released within that time, 70 years from the end of the
calendar year in which the work was first released.
Films: 70 years from the end of the calendar year in which the last principal director,
author or composer dies.
If the work is of unknown authorship: 70 years from end of the calendar year of
creation, or if made available to the public in that time, 70 years from the end of the
year the film was first made available.
Typographical arrangement of published editions: 25 years from the end of the
calendar year in which the work was first published.
Broadcasts and cable programmes: 50 years from the end of the calendar year in
which the broadcast was made.

Application:
How you will specifically avoid breaking this law – what exactly will you avoid and
how?

My Fashion spread will only contain photos that I have taken myself. I will not take
any photos from another fashion spread. All content will be original material.

Equality Act 2010


This law legally protects people from discrimination in the workplace and in wider
society.
It is against the law to discriminate against anyone because of:
Ø Age
Ø Being or becoming a transsexual person
Ø Being married or in a civil partnership
Ø Being pregnant or on maternity leave
Ø Disability
Ø Race including colour, nationality, ethnic or national origin
Ø Religion/belief or lack of religion/belief
Ø Sex
Ø Sexual orientation

This is a CRIMINAL law.

Therefore anyone who is considered to be breaking the law could be arrested. It


would result in a criminal trial which if found guilty could result in a fine or jail
sentence.

Application:
How you will specifically avoid breaking this law – what exactly will you avoid and
how?

I will use people from different ethnicities, sexes and ages. I will treat each
one of my models equally and will not discriminate against their religion,
sexuality or race.

Intellectual property

What intellectual property is?


Having the right type of intellectual property protection helps you to stop people
stealing or copying:
Ø the names of your products or brands
Ø your inventions
Ø the design or look of your products
Ø things you write, make or produce

Copyright, patents, designs and trademarks are all types of intellectual property
protection. You get some types of protection automatically, others you have to apply
for.

You own intellectual property if you:


Ø created it (and it meets the requirements for copyright, a patent or a design
Ø bought intellectual property rights from the creator or a previous owner
Ø have a brand that could be a trade mark e.g. a well-known product name

If you believe anyone has stolen or copied your property you would sue them in civil
court.

Types of protection
The type of protection you can get depends on what you’ve created. You get some
types of protection automatically, others you have to apply for.

Automatic protection
Protection you have to apply for

Application
How you will specifically avoid breaking this law – what exactly will you avoid and
how?

The fashion spread will be original. Any logos that are included on the fashion
spread I will get permission by the clothes brand to use those logos in order to
sell the products.

Obscene Publications Act 1959:


For the purposes of this Act an article shall be deemed to be obscene if its effect or
(where the article comprises two or more distinct items) the effect of any one of its
items is, if taken as a whole, such as to tend to deprave and corrupt persons who are
likely, having regard to all relevant circumstances, to read, see or hear the matter
contained or embodied in it.

In this Act ‘article’ means any description of article containing or embodying matter to
be read or looked at or both, any sound record and any film or other record of a
picture or pictures.

This is a criminal law.


Application:
How you will specifically avoid breaking this law – what exactly will you avoid and
how?

My product will not contain any obscene content since my product is a fashion
spread. Meaning only clothes will be showcased in the product.

Trespass:
This is a civil law.
Trespass to land consists of any unjustifiable intrusion by a person upon the land in
possession of another.
Civil trespass is actionable in the courts.

Application:
How you will specifically avoid breaking this law – what exactly will you avoid and
how?

The main majority of the locations of my fashion spread will be taken in public areas
meaning I will not need permission to take these pictures from a higher authority.

Privacy
The introduction of the Human Rights Act 1998 incorporated into English law the
European Convention on Human Rights.

Article 8.1 of the ECHR provides an explicit right to respect for a private life:
Article 8 protects your right to respect for your private life, your family life, your home
and your correspondence (letters, telephone calls and emails, for example).

Privacy Law is a law which deals with the use of people’s personal information and
making sure they aren't intruded upon. These laws make sure people can't have
their information wrongly used without permission.

Anyone who believes their right has been broken can make a civil claim in the courts
against those they believe have invaded their privacy.

When applying the legal principles the court will balance the claimant's right to
privacy against the right to freedom of expression.

If the claimant is proved to be correct this could result in an injunction banning


publication of information; damages; and return or destruction of the material gained
from the intrusion.
Application:
How you will specifically avoid breaking this law – what exactly will you avoid and
how?

I will not be including any personal information in this fashion spread. I will
only show information related to the style of the fashion spread. The clothing
used and the credits for the photos.

Defamation Act 2013


This Act reformed defamation law on issues of the right to freedom of expression
and the protection of reputation. It also comprised a response to perceptions that the
law as it stood was giving rise to libel tourism and other inappropriate claims.

The Act changed existing criteria for a successful claim, by requiring claimants to
show actual or probable serious harm (which, in the case of for-profit bodies, is
restricted to serious financial loss), before suing for defamation in England or Wales.

It also enhanced existing defences, by introducing a defence for website operators


hosting user-generated content (provided they comply with a procedure to enable
the complainant to resolve disputes directly with the author of the material concerned
or otherwise remove it), and introducing new statutory defences of truth, honest
opinion, and "publication on a matter of public interest“.

LIBEL
A written, published false statement that is damaging to a person's reputation.

SLANDER
Making a false spoken statement damaging to a person's reputation.

Defamation is a civil law and so you would need to sue someone who you believe
has damaged your reputation.

Application:
How you will specifically avoid breaking this law – what exactly will you avoid and
how?

Once again my fashion spread will only showcase information related to the
clothing instead of personal information. Or information that is used to portray
an individual in a poor manner.
Ethical Constraints:

Representation and Stereotypes:

Application:
How you will specifically avoid crossing any ethical lines – what exactly will you avoid
and how?

To avoid this ethical constraint, I will not try to stereotype or represent any
ethnicities, sexuality’s or religions in an inappropriate fashion. Since this will
only include photos of clothing and information based upon that clothing.

Content: Themes, visuals, audio

Application:
How you will specifically avoid crossing any ethical lines – what exactly will you avoid
and how?

The content of my magazine will only be based upon fashionable weather wear
instead of content that is unrelated to the subject. Meaning everything will be based
upon the specific target audience of my fashion spread. Teenage weather fashion.

Contingency plans
Risks Solutions
Batteries die Have extra batteries on hand
Props break Buy some spare props
Computer breaks I will make sure my files are saved
Files corrupt Ill will have an additional file with a copy of the
original file.
Spill water over computer Keep water away from any computer
Model Bails Stay in contact with another model so that then
when the main model refuses to co-operate
another model will be available on hand.

You might also like