212 F. 930 | 2d Cir. | 1914
(after stating the facts as above). This is not simply the case of taking two separate photographs of the same young woman.
The case is quite similar to those where indirect copying, through the use of living pictures, was held to be an infringement of copyright. Hanfstaengle v. Baines & Co. (L. R. 1894) A. C. 20, 30; Turner v. Robinson, 10 Irish Chancery 121, 510.
The eye of an artist or a connoisseur will, no doubt, find differences between these two photographs.. The backgrounds are not identical, the model in one case is sedate, in the other smiling; moreover the young woman was two years older when the later photograph was taken, and some slight changes in the contours of her figure are discoverable. But the identities are much greatef than the differences, and it seems to us that the artist was careful to introduce only enough differences to argue about, while undertaking to make what would
The order is affirmed.