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#NoFreePhotos From Street Style Photographers

By Chidirim Ndeche
30 September 2017   |   12:06 pm
Gone are the days of doing "work for free" as photographers have risen up in revolt at the way fashion labels and influencers in the multi-billion dollar industry have been using their street style images without crediting them. You may have seen and even laughed at pictures of photographers staying in ridiculous positions or putting…

Gone are the days of doing “work for free” as photographers have risen up in revolt at the way fashion labels and influencers in the multi-billion dollar industry have been using their street style images without crediting them.

You may have seen and even laughed at pictures of photographers staying in ridiculous positions or putting themselves in dangerous positions just to get a perfect shot.

Street-style photographers wait ever-ready to take photos of stylish pedestrians at fashion week, even going as far as jumping into oncoming traffic to get good shots of them.

Photographers taking street style pictures of influencers on the sidewalks at fashion week. Photo credit: Miguel Medina / AFP

Influencers and brands will then use their photos for editorial and commercial purposes without compensating them properly.

These influencers and bloggers are often paid by labels to wear their clothes and promote their lines in social media posts, mostly on Instagram. And the photographers claim that some influencers with hundreds of thousands of social media followers are making money from their photos while they get nothing in return.

Because of this, over 40 photographers who follow the fashion circuit and snap its top celebrities and bloggers as they arrive for shows in New York, Paris and Milan have formed an unofficial union, and have threatened to shame brands and influencers who use their images without permission.

The protesting photographers have begun adding the hashtag #NoFreePhotos to images uploaded to their Instagram accounts, which have more than three million followers, and they have threatened to refuse to tag rogue influencers and instead call them out with the #NoFreePhotos hashtag.

Some group members are also adding “My images are not to be used without consent” to their Instagram bios.

(FILES) This file photograph taken on September 29, 2017, shows a woman as she poses for photographers during the Paris women’s 2018 Spring/Summer ready-to-wear collection fashion week in Paris.<br />Photographers are protesting at fashion labels and influencers using their street style images without crediting them amid growing signs of discontent about the “work for free” culture in the multi-billion dollar industry / AFP PHOTO / STR

The row raises questions about how the fashion industry works in the digital age, with many people prepared to work for little or nothing to get a foothold in such an outwardly glamorous world.

One of the group’s leaders, Nabile Quenum, told AFP that the protest was “not about shaming anyone. We are in this together. We are just asking for respect.

“Girls get famous because of the photographers. We take pictures of the people we judge cool. When we shoot someone it says they are cool and people look for inspiration from cool people. Brands can see (from what we do) who is hot, who is marketable… and who they can pay to lead them to the consumer. Somehow (the influencers) have forgotten that we make them.”

A Japanese photographer called Koji outside the Issey Miyake Paris Fashion Week show on Friday said he had stopped uploading his images to Instagram because of rampant piracy.

“Why should I so people can steal my work and not even credit me. I have had enough,” he added.

But the claims that influencers were making a “disproportionate gain” from cheerleading for brands drew a sharp response on Instagram from some bloggers.

This file photograph taken on September 29, 2017, shows a woman as she poses for photographers during the Paris women’s 2018 Spring/Summer ready-to-wear collection fashion week in Paris.<br />Photographers are protesting at fashion labels and influencers using their street style images without crediting them amid growing signs of discontent about the “work for free” culture in the multi-billion dollar industry. / AFP PHOTO / STR

A top blogger Bryan Grey Yambao, aka Bryanboy, who is a Filipino style guru with more than 640,000 Instagram followers, had a few things to say:

“The notion that many influencers are being ‘disproportionately’ paid to wear clothes is quite laughable. Do these photographers know how absolutely cheap many of the brands are? A lot of the girls I know are not being paid to wear clothes. Many spend money to go back and forth for ‘fittings’… and are often dressed by brands to be on their ‘good graces’. All for free!

Influencers are happy to do all that to develop a (usually disposable) relationship with brands who are more than happy to move on to the next girl with even more followers.”

Yambao said he understood that photographers had to be paid. “But then again, when was the last time an influencer demanded a model release form from photographers who sell their images to magazines, retailer websites or the brands directly?

“Imagine if every influencer or editor or fashion person started complaining that their images are being taken and sold without authorisation?” he added.

But American photographer Jennifer Graylock said the relationship was “lopsided in favour of the influencer or celebrity. If a photo runs of you wearing designer X you get exposure. Which leads to more followers which leads to more interest in your favour.

“However (if the photographer has been credited) they only get the 10 cents and never benefit further.”

***AFP

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