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Author Topic: Model Release in Africa  (Read 3418 times)

sanzari

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Model Release in Africa
« on: October 19, 2010, 03:50:40 pm »

Hi this is my first post so sorry i do not offer info yet, but rather request info.

I am off to Africa for a trip on a charity and volunteering exercise part of which will be hopefully using an MF back to produce some portraits. Given I am not sure of the international law on model release, as I have obtained consent for people to be photographed, if I wanted to sell the images to an agency, etc,etc how does one go about getting a valid model release given many of the people cannot write or indeed speak english ??

Wondered if anyone had come across this ??

thanks in advance T
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Terence h

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Re: Model Release in Africa
« Reply #1 on: October 20, 2010, 06:32:12 am »

You would still be obliged where the people do not speak your language to get a model release
translated for them to sign.
But of course if the image is for editorial use only you do not need a release , just for commercial use.
If you photograph children for commercial use you would of course need the parents consent and that is often just not worth the
trouble.
I personally just photograph for editorial use now , anyway stock is faltering badly.

Regards
Terence
Durban
South Africa
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Terence Hogben. Durban. South Africa. ht

sanzari

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Re: Model Release in Africa
« Reply #2 on: October 20, 2010, 06:53:35 am »

What happens when there are no parents I guess it's the orphanage ?

And what happens if they cannot read it write?

Also not sure difference between editorial and commercial both are printed both are sold?

Thanks for your advice. It's Kenya I am going into.

T
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Terence h

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Re: Model Release in Africa
« Reply #3 on: October 20, 2010, 07:45:21 am »

Yes it would be the legal guardian.
Your model can sign with a cross or finger print preferably with a witness and preferably photographed.
Editorial is not directly associated with a product whereas commercial is , example from toys to insurance products
or dicey sub prime home loan products.
The world has shrunk with technology and i would not take a chance without a signed legal model release wherever
you are going to work.

Regards
Terence
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Terence Hogben. Durban. South Africa. ht
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