Archive for May, 2010

What does a Photo Detective Do? by Maureen Taylor (AKA The Photo Detective)

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

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Whenever I meet new people, a lot of people ask me, “What does a Photo Detective Do?”  I explain that I study the evidence in pictures to assign names and dates. I also fit the images into the context of family, local or national history.

I thought you’d like a peek into what a month is like. Some are busier than others, but here’s a sampling of what I worked on last month.

  • Consulted with a client who’s a scrimshaw historian. He wanted me to provide a time frame for the carvings on a series of tusks and identify the source of the drawings. [I was able to tell him that most were derived from early nineteenth century magazine illustrations and mid-nineteenth century photographs of notable figures.]
  • Researched Civil War uniforms for a series of cold cases I’ve been working on. [No answers yet!]
  • Spoke with a client about two paintings in her family. [The work I do with photographs translates into other types of family artifacts as well.]
  • Consulted on a photo for TLC’s Accidental Fortune. [The producer wanted information on how to determine if an image was a particular photographic method.]
  • Began working with a client on a previously unknown picture of Lincoln’s funeral. [This is fascinating]
  • Woman’s Day magazine interviewed me about magnetic photo albums. Watch for the August issue!
  • Developed new lectures for upcoming conferences.[I have new photo presentations. My fingers are crossed they'll be accepted for next year's events.]
  • Started laying out photographs for a new book. Ran through a lot of ink cartridges.
  • Wrote articles for Ancestry.com, Family Tree Magazine and Irish Roots Magazine.  Oh yeah…my blog and social networking sites as well. 

What a month! Client meetings, lectures, article writing and book planning. I had a great time!

Ask Maureen to Analyze Your Family Photos

Don’t let heaps of unidentified, damaged, or disorganized family photos get you down. The Photo Detective can help!

maureen taylorAbout Maureen Taylor

Maureen Taylor AKA the Photo Detective is a professional genealogist, author and journalist on the topic who’s written tons of books and magazine articles, as well as being a contributing editor at Family Tree Magazine and editorial board member of Legacy Magazine. She’s also been a featured expert on CNN, the Today Show and in Martha Stewart Living. Maureen can be contacted through her website Photo Detective or on Twitter at @PhotoDetective.

Peanuts Comic Strip Franchise Sold For $175 Million

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

Peanuts Comic Strip Franchise Sold For $175 Million  

Schulz Family Gains More Control In New Deal

peanuts-gangNewspaper publisher E.W. Scripps Co. has agreed to sell its licensing unit, United Media Licensing, to licensing company Iconix Brand Group Inc., which owns the clothing brands Joe Boxer and London Fog. United Media Licensing, which owns the rights to several comic-strip characters such as Dilbert and Raggedy Ann and Andy, pulls in the majority of its licensing revenues from the “Peanuts” family of characters, including the lovable loser Charlie Brown, and his imaginative pup, Snoopy.

Like many cartoonists of his era, the late Peanuts creator Charles Schulz had to give up the rights to his characters when the comic strip was first brought to market in 1950. Schulz later fought to regain the rights to Charlie Brown, Snoopy, Linus, Schroeder, Lucy, Pigpen, Sally, Marcy, Peppermint Patty, Woodstock, and the rest of his cartoon creations. According to Schulz’s son Craig, the cartoonist even threatened to quit at one point, until he was given more business and artistic control.

The sale of Peanuts licensing rights to Iconix is good news for the Schulz family, which will also gain from the deal. The Schulzes have agreed to pay $35 million, 20 percent of the purchase price, for that same percentage of control of and revenue from the comic strip’s legacy.

Although no new comic strips have been drawn since Charles Schulz passed away in 2000, his artwork, much of which has been digitized with photo scanning equipment, still generates a steady stream of revenue from licensing usage rights to companies as varied as CVS, Hallmark, MetLife Inc., Old Navy, and Warner Bros. Charlie Brown, Snoopy, and the rest of the Peanuts gang can be found on T-shirts, greeting cards, and other merchandise all over the world.

Schulz’s son Craig has said that his family (Schulz had five children) is very relieved to have regained an ownership interest in the Peanuts franchise. The family also stands to make a significant profit from the deal. Each year, some 20,000 new Peanuts products are approved in over 40 countries around the world. Photo scanning allows Schulz’s original artwork to appear on anything from book covers to greeting cards to sno-cone makers. And though no new Peanuts comic-strips have been drawn in the last decade, many of 2,600 newspapers that published Peanuts at the time of Schulz’s retirement have chosen to re-run old Peanuts strips rather than say farewell to the beloved comic. New owner Iconix expects to pull in $75 million in annual royalty revenue from the Peanuts franchise alone.