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Firetracie, thank you for your reply.
I fully understand that you own the copyright to the photographs taken on your behalf by your employees. As I stated earlier, I too will be working for another studio this weekend and they will own the copyright.
However, when shooting a wedding as a freelance photographer, under my own business name (if you like), I am the creator of the images therefore I own the copyright.
From the Intellectual Property Office..."The general rule about first ownership of copyright is that the author is the first owner.
If you create a copyright work, you become the 'author' so in the case of any photographs you take you are the first owner. However, an example where this may not be the case is if it was you who pressed the camera button and someone else who decided things like the camera angle, exposure and so on.
If you make a photograph with two or more people and each persons contribution to the photograph is not distinct, then you all become joint authors and joint first owners of copyright and the permission of each joint owner will be needed before such a photograph can be used.
This general rule about first ownership of copyright resting with the 'author' is, however, overridden in the case of photographs which are made by an employee in the course of employment; in this case, the employer is the first owner of copyright subject to any agreement to the contrary.
If you commission a photograph you will only be the copyright owner if there is an agreement to assign copyright to you"
So firetracie, if you asked me to shoot your birthday party, I would own the copyright to the images created, unless of course you commissioned a specific photograph, taken from a specific angle, in fact, pretty much set it up yourself apart from myself merely pressing the shutter release button. It doesn't matter if I supply one set of photographs or supply a