Harvard law professor Jeannie Suk writes an opinion piece in the NY Times about the Louboutin lawsuit, connecting the red sole trademark litigation with the absence of copyright protection for fashion:
It is time for Congress to address directly the fusion of practicality and beauty that makes fashion such a compelling medium of expression and a profitable creative industry, one that merits its own limited industry-specific protections. Otherwise, colorful as they are, lawsuits like the red sole case are likely to compound the uncertainty that results from the absence of statutory delineation of fashion design protection — and invites more lawsuits.
Johanna Blakley, managing director of USC’s The Norman Lear Center, argues in her TED talk (via Marty Schwimmer) that it is the absence of copyright law that is responsible for the vibrancy and success of the fashion industry:
Because there’s no copyright protection in the fashion industry, fashion designers have actually been able to elevate utilitarian design, things to cover our naked bodies, into something we consider art. Because there’s no copyright protection in this industry, there’s a very open and creative ecology of creativity. Unlike their creative brothers and sisters who are sculptors or photographers, or filmmakers or musicians, fashion designers can sample from all their peers’ designs, they can take any element from any garment from the history of fashion and incorporate it into their own design.
Fashion design is difficult to do well, and it can be demoralizing to see your hard work and inspiration used by someone else without permission. On the other hand, it would be dispiriting and make design even harder if you had to constantly worry about infringement or have to consult your copyright attorney to get clearance for each season’s new designs.
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I’m an attorney licensed in Oregon and California, where I focus my practice on trademark registration, infringement disputes, TTAB proceedings, copyright matters and internet law. Thanks for visiting. Any content in this post is for informational purposes only and cannot be relied on as legal advice. For more information about my practice, please visit Armistead Law.