Your Work is Worth Protecting: The "Invisible" Side of Design
Happy Day 2, Designers!
Yesterday we fell in love with the craft. Today, we make sure that craft stays yours. In the Krewe of Designers, we believe that a professional designer isn’t just someone who can draft—it’s someone who respects the value of the work.
Let’s clear up the "Legal Loop" that many designers get stuck in.
📝 Copyright: The Creative Shield
Copyright protects your original expression. This exists the moment you put pen to paper or mouse to screen.
What is protected: Your technical illustrations, the specific wording of your instructions, and your unique photos.
What is NOT protected: In the garment world, "useful articles" (like the basic shape of a dress) generally cannot be copyrighted. However, your specific pattern instructions are your intellectual property.
🏷️ Trademark: The Identity Shield
While copyright protects the work, a Trademark protects your Brand Identity.
The Goal: You trademark things like the name "Leah B." or the "Monarch Maxi" brand logo so no one else can sell patterns using your reputation.
The Difference: You don't trademark a "sewing pattern"; you trademark the source of that pattern so the world knows it came from you.
📜 Establishing Your Pattern Rights
Every Brand Pattern Package needs a clear "Terms of Use". This sets the boundaries for your community:
Personal Use: The buyer can make 100 dresses for themselves or friends.
Commercial Use: If they want to sell those dresses in a boutique, they need a specific license from you.
Leah B. Pro Tip: Being clear about your rights isn't being "mean"—it’s being professional. It teaches your customers the value of the time you spent drafting and testing that pattern.
💬 Today’s Creative Challenge:
Let's talk about Brand Identity! If you were to file for a trademark today, what is the one "Signature Style" or "Brand Name" you would want to protect?
Drop your brand names (or your "dream" brand name) in the comments below! 👇
2
1 comment
Leah Brown
3
Your Work is Worth Protecting: The "Invisible" Side of Design
powered by
Krewe of Designers
skool.com/krewe-of-designers-5161
Louisiana based sewing community for aspiring and growing Indie Fashion Designers. I offer everything from basic dress making to embroidery.
Build your own community
Bring people together around your passion and get paid.
Powered by