Amateur Photographer

Photographer’s self-defence kit

Source:   It pays to know your rights under the law, when you're out taking photographs  

‘In many private properties, photography is allowed only if the images are for personal use’

It’s crazy. People with mobile phones seem to be able to take pictures of just about anybody or anything, anywhere, anytime, and share the images around the world in a matter of seconds. But take a ‘proper’ camera out of its bag when you’re out and about, and you can be made to feel like an arch criminal. It pays to know your rights.

In a nutshell, if you’re on public land, you’re free to shoot whatever you like, within reason. So, if you’re on a public road or pavement, or even a public footpath across privately owned fields, you’re within your rights to photograph people and even private property from where you’re standing. However, you’re not allowed to cause an obstruction, which rules out setting

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Amateur Photographer

Amateur Photographer2 min read
Professor Newman On… Information Design
For a period of my career I worked with a professor of information design, Professor Clive Richards. Information Design covers the production of graphics and other visual presentations to best convey information. With some careful choice of represent
Amateur Photographer7 min read
DIGITAL STARS Fifty Quid Quality
Let’s start, not with a camera, but with an image. Look at the picture of the cat on this page. Notice how the eyes, the fur, every whisker, every wisp of hair, are all pin-sharp. And rest assured, the quality is retained when this image is interpola
Amateur Photographer8 min read
Workers Of The World
From 1986-1992, Sebastião Salgado travelled across the globe documenting the end of the first big Industrial Revolution and the demise of manual labour. The result was the classic tome, Workers: An Archaeology of the Industrial Age. The book presente

Related Books & Audiobooks