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Originally posted by Chuck Mallory View PostLiney, hows the ice cream shop going. I've been in Michigan all summer and just returned to NC. Sorry I didn't get the chance to make it over to Chesaning, I really wanted to but stayed too busy helping grandpa and fishing.Last edited by Rob F; August 9, 2012, 03:55 PM.
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Chuck - Its been an up and down year. Started off pretty well, but now its tailing off. We're going to shut down the day after Labor Day. I'm losing most of my help then, with my college gals going back to school, and my other two "married with children ladies" needing their evenings off.
So, it will be a wrap on this season, and we'll see how things shape up for next season."in order to lead America you must love America"
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A question for the legal beagles here. I was in Northern Kentucky on business and had the opportunity to check out the Pompeii exhibition at a museum in Cincy recently. I saw a near violent confrontation between museum staff and a person who took some pictures with a cell phone. The staff demanded the cellphone in order to delete the pix and further demand the person buy the exhibition book as recompense. PHOTOGRAPHY IST STRICTLY VERBOTEN!!!
Now I collect old books (among other things). I love illuminated manuscripts. I understand where flash photography is forbidden in places like the Louvre, the British Museum and the British Library because the repeated intense light of flash photography can damage or fade many century old illustrations.
But statues, coins, and jewelry? I gladly pay my $20 to frolick among the artifacts, but can they (the museum) really ban you from taking photos? Sure, setting up a tripod with professional equipment in order to get high grade sellable pix could reasonably be prohibited. But tourists taking pix? Can they really do anything other than ask you to leave? I ask this question concerning American law.
I was once scolded for taking a picture of the British crown jewels in the Tower of London, the concern was images of the security measures, not the jewels themselves. Once they saw I was a stupid American tourist, the angst level went down. Matter of fact, I was allowed to take a couple of flashless shots of the Swords of State by the Beefeater guards when they were looking (wink wink) the other way. They don't get many people more interested in the history/archeology than the monetary value of the displays. I bought the books (and the t-shirt) anyway.“Outside of a dog, a book is a man's best friend. Inside of a dog, it's too dark to read.” - Groucho Marx
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I don't know of any law or legal principle that would prohibit a ban on photography. Hack is basically right that a private museum would have more right to restrict photographs as it would not be subject to a potential first amendment argument as first amendment rights are only protected against federal or state action.
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here's a policy at indy's museum
you would be caught by the last one
General Visitors
- Photography must be conducted without disruption to Museum operations or limitation to the accessibility of exhibitions, entrances/exits, doorways, and high traffic areas.
- To help us preserve the outdoor sculptures, entering, climbing, or standing on any water features or fountains is prohibited; do not climb, lean or sit on any artworks. Do not place props or equipment on the sculptures.
- Flash photography, tripods, and other photographic equipment are not permitted in the galleries or Oldfields–Lilly House.
- Photography is permitted for private, noncommercial use only. Photographs may not be published, sold, reproduced, distributed, or otherwise commercially exploited in any manner.
- Photography is not permitted of temporary exhibitions, works of art within the Efroymson Family Entrance Pavilion or the fourth floor contemporary art galleries, within Miller House, or borrowed works of art.
Benny Blades~"If you break down this team man for man, we have talent to compare with any team."
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Searching around, variations of this
Works on loan to the Museum or in exhibitions in the Featured Exhibition galleries may not be photographed.
are widespreadBenny Blades~"If you break down this team man for man, we have talent to compare with any team."
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Most art museums I have been in have restrictions on photography. It is usually okay to photograph the older stuff (with no flash), but anything with an existing copyright is a no-no.
And yeah, if something is a special exhibit that's separate admission from the main museum, photographs are almost always off-limits
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