On 2/15/04 1:24:41 PM, Tsandi Crew
wrote:
>When you sell your stock
>illustration thru a stock
>house, does the stock house
>retain the copyright? Or can
>you resell it after you have
>done your 5 year stint?
I would not place my work with a stock
house—with the exception of one—under
any circumstances, because their
promises greatly exceed the reality, and
while you do not give up copyright, you
give up all exclusive rights, and therefore
total control to your images for 5 years.
Agencies' hyped promos are lavish
overstatements meant to seduce
illustrators with lofty promises of profit
and prestige. Unless you are in the
highest level of premium illustrators, you
will see returns as low as $10 an image,
and those returns will decline over the
years. Your commission actually goes
down over time. This has been my
personal experience as a veteran of
stock agency dealings.
Not only that, but it can be like pulling
teeth to extricate your work from one of
these agencies. They are not quick to
make return of your work a priority. Some
of them even keep your work, and after
severing relations—sometimes years
after—they'll call you to ask if you'd like
them to handle a transaction for a client
who is interested in your work! They will
not refer the client to you. So, they
maintain possession of your image
forever, unbeknownst to you. Once you let
the horse out of the barn, that horse is
gone forever. This has happened with
numerous images of mine over the years.
Far better that you *maintain control* of
rights to your work at all times, in
perpetuity, as they say, and opt for
Folioplanet, the i-spot, or your own
custom search engine on your website.
http://www.robertsaunders.com