to rip or not to rip
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- 8 Responses
- ukit0
Ever tried eating with a comb? Your question is irrelevant.
- Douglas0
Depends if the failed comb was made by Pentagram.
Did the fork dude add another prong and extended the handle a bit to make it his own?
- ETM0
You license the comb and pay royalties for every fork you sell.
- Peter0
Go forth and reproduce
- akrokdesign0
do a duo. half fork, half comb. or as we like to call it, the combo.
- utopian0
Email P Diddy, he has the answers that you are looking for...
- shellie0
I'll humor this...
I did a motion piece that was heavily inspired by stop motion animation I saw as a kid -- what's the difference between being inspired by something you just looked up and something you saw when you were 8? I certainly wasn't the first animator apply a throwback stop motion motif with paper cut outs. But, I suppose it's mostly about the context of these loose parameters you're throwing out there.In my mind, what separates my piece as a rip from others is:
1 - I never claimed that my approach was was original.
2 - There's many others that have tired the same thing (some good, some bad). And, at a certain point some concepts become public domain and you can only hope be the first to claim credit.I think there's a fine line. Most of us can't create absolute fire each and every time we need to execute an idea or finish a project. We're all guilty of some lazy inspiration. But, I believe it's up to each designer and their ethics to put some energy forward to make their work personal to themselves (and not be a dick about it).
Nevermind. I'll get my coat.