![]() |
Quote:
about time someone sees my point :thumbsup |
Quote:
:1orglaugh |
Quote:
please tell me how to lock my layer style on a text header , and have the text completely editable ? I may be missing something .. Wheres the link to that crap you do ? I dont like to put a man down , but you asked for it and your clearly just a fuckin idiot . |
Its simple.. If you want them tell them before hand. If they dont want to give them to you then use someone who will :)
|
Quote:
Click on layers menu, and you will see several options to configure settings and these are the options to flatten. It makes very little sense to flatten the text unless it's already been rendered (layers/type/render layer) which at that point you can't change it anyway from the PSD file that is delivered to you, provider the designer removed the "actions" and those actions would have to recent or you would be destroying the other work in the file by trying to unrender the layer. No designer is going to flatten straight text, only the images that test is superimposed upon. Which is the only thing you should desire to change(as in price, free offer, URL, etc...) If you need to change the image then you need a new logo. Enough of this, you think I'm stupid but I'm telling you how to use the software. |
gee this was actually turning in to a decent discussion, I knew it couldnt last.
:( |
Quote:
That has nothing to do with the issue. The food is of no value after about an hour. The site owner needs to spends a long time regaining costs and the site is NOT disposable. again :2 cents: |
yes
|
No PSDs on a tour design ? No sale. :2 cents:
|
Quote:
Joe's Resturant will pay *far* more than a mid level adult player.. I can get a site done here for $300-500 no problem whatsoever. In mainstream clients don't have the instant buyer's market with romanian and college kid downward pressure on prices, and a dozen guys in their bedrooms underbidding each other 5 minutes after a job thread has been posted. The average small business website is around 1-2k, mid around 5-10k and large anywhere from 10-100k and that doesn't take into account hugely inflated hosting costs, domain reselling and other things that mainstream businesses make cash on that adult designers can't make off webmasters. The only very cheap thing in mainstream is when clients are charged for one of those single page directory "sites". Mainstream clients pay more for logos than adult clients pay for whole sites with logos.. The average adult site is around 600-800 with a logo and everything. 1k is high in adult, designers here would kills each other for a shot at a 2k job. |
make it clear before the job :)
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
if i give the file up i usually leave the file in basic layers like image, text and background. but if they are cheap then i give it flattened hehe
|
Quote:
|
if i am paying you to develop a design for me, i would expect the PSDs, with NO flattening, PERIOD!
if i want to diseminate my product that I purchased then that is my prerogative. i can do anything i want with it, including making galleries, banners, etc, based on layers and styles nabbed from the tour design. i own the likeness rights to my design correct? therefor i can use its likeness in anyway that i see fit. i never even knew there were designers that didnt give up PSDs, as you on contracted to do the work, therefore the work you do is property of the client. i always assumed everyone knew exactly what OldJeff stated. If i payed a coder to develop a script or application for me, i would expect full sourcecode as well. Granted i can change that too, but that again is my prerogative as i am the owner of the product. |
wow this is still going on? LOL
|
Quote:
I've worked as an art director in the commercial non-adult industry for years. We have never supplied clients with the PSD's for any project. Our PSD's would give the client the potential to create several variations by making changes with the text, hue, saturation, etc....basically creating new designs that they would have never been create without that file. Unfortunately, it appears few designers are using contracts here....big mistake. Our contract clearly states what the client is buying...whether it's a logo, a layout, a billboard, whatever. However, we also provide the rider that we'll be happy to do minor retouches on the work to suit the needs of the client. If those "changes" however are going to be more of a redesign that's when they pay. We never give out raw materials for projects...exactly for the reasons discussed in previous posts, the client with little to no talent would then be able to take our work and rework it into a new design. I'm not going to allow someone to take $$ from me. If a client wants minor changes to their design we're more than happy to provide it. However, if the work goes above an hour we charge, it's only fair, designers are trying to make a living too...trust me, it ain't easy. I've seen several posts comparing a designers PSD's to a programmers script. That's not a good comparison...a better one would be a photographer taking some exclusive photos for you. If you decided you wanted to change something would you expect the photographer to supply all models and props to you? (Wouldn't it be great if they did?) |
Quote:
|
A lot of people here truly need to get a copy of the copyright law and read it. So much of what is said is stuff that is commonly belived but completely false.
Take the example of the original Napster, they thought they were legal and I laughed my ass off when I heard them say that. They simply did not read the law and chosed to believe folk law. About the debate about who owns the design? I can tell you this; if a client defaces a design after he has paid for it the designer can sue in any court and win with ease. You can't "do what ever you want" with it; there are limits. If the client uses the design in a way to defame the designer they can actually face criminal charges in the state of New York. See part of the mis-understanding here is that you can't really buy a design; you can buy an exclusive right to use the design and you can buy the copyright to the design from the designer. So if you really want to cover your ass you should be telling the designer that you are buying the copyright to the design that he delivered, which I agree is almost non-sense because what designer is stupid enough to ruin their rep buy claiming a right to the work he sold you? It'll never happen unless you make a T-shirt out of it that sales millions and the designer is a resentful looser of a bastard. But in that case you would be in a bad spot so if going to court choose a jury trail because the judge will just fuck you up because you didn't secure a copyright. If you want to "do whatever you want" with it then you better state in your contract that you are buying the copyright. If that make no sense to you then try this: Buy a painting from a famous artist then "do what ever you want" like print posters and sell them and see how long before you get fucked up for copyright violation. All you bought was the work; not the rights to the work. Motherfuckers who don't understand that always end up in court crying. This is what lawyers are for. The law is complicated and most here don't truly understand it. I know a little more than average because of legal hurdles I has faced before but I am still no expert so if you think you really know the law in and out you're probably just suffering from a big ego. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
There is some misconception in customers that somehow you are paying for my time, this is incorrect unless that's the agreement we have. |
Depends of what kind of job . If the client need to print then I'l hold . If he ask me nicely I'l probably give it out in most cases
|
Quote:
It would be interesting to get a copyright lawyers take on this...I understand what you're talking about but won't beging to pretend i know thelaw in this area. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
One thing is sure, more designers need to require their clients to sign TOS before proceeding with projects, however I've had plenty customer completely ignore this very simple request with the understanding that if I pushed the issue, they would go to someone who doesn't insist on complicated business procedures like 'a contract'.. |
Quote:
I think in the long term you'll find those who don't wish to handle business in a professional manager you probably didn't want to end up doing biz with to begin with. |
Quote:
Well said but that is my point. When they refuse to sign you now have the option of dropping them as a client or doing the work knowing there is no implied use law covering web sites. I dont disagree that its shady to use a design you paid for over and over again just tweaking it to make it look slightly different. BUT there is no implied use law covring web site design that I know off so weather its shady its one thing, weather its illegal is another. |
Quote:
|
nope
|
All times are GMT -7. The time now is 10:27 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
©2000-, AI Media Network Inc123