Copyright law relating to objects
Posted: Thu Apr 10, 2025 4:33 pm
I have UK-based company selling embroidery kits.
I have taken my own photos of crowns in the British royal collection and embroidered versions of them, and now wish to sell them as embroidery kits for others to buy and stitch themselves.
The embroidered crowns are small (approx. 2-3” tall, 1-2” wide) so there is a limit to how realistic they are / how faithfully they can be reproduced. My kits do not include photographs of any of the physical crowns, only photos of my embroidered version of the crown for the stitcher to use as a stitching guide when following the kit’s instructions.
I have two questions as follows:
1. Would the sale of these kits breach UK copyright given that I based the design on someone else’s possession? To reiterate, my design is from my own photo and the design is too small for the crown to be reproduced faithfully.
2. Can I refer in my instructions to the actual name of the crown eg. Imperial State Crown, St Edward’s Crown, Tudor Crown etc, or does using the official name compromise me in terms of copyright?
I have taken my own photos of crowns in the British royal collection and embroidered versions of them, and now wish to sell them as embroidery kits for others to buy and stitch themselves.
The embroidered crowns are small (approx. 2-3” tall, 1-2” wide) so there is a limit to how realistic they are / how faithfully they can be reproduced. My kits do not include photographs of any of the physical crowns, only photos of my embroidered version of the crown for the stitcher to use as a stitching guide when following the kit’s instructions.
I have two questions as follows:
1. Would the sale of these kits breach UK copyright given that I based the design on someone else’s possession? To reiterate, my design is from my own photo and the design is too small for the crown to be reproduced faithfully.
2. Can I refer in my instructions to the actual name of the crown eg. Imperial State Crown, St Edward’s Crown, Tudor Crown etc, or does using the official name compromise me in terms of copyright?