Yes, seem to remember its under a bridge and near/by the Royal Festival Hall.
If he threatened to throw you out of the park I would have called the police and have him up for using threatening behaviour.
If he threatened to throw you out of the park I would have called the police and have him up for using threatening behaviour. Unless it clearly states on the entrance that no flash photography allowed then all he can do is advise you to stop using your flashgun and give a reasonable reason to do so.
To many petty officials have no training in how to address a problem and think they can just bully people about.
Realspeed
The photographer had entered private property in the form of the skatepark and attempted to take photos of people who it has never been stated knew the photographer or had given their permission. That is actually neither here nor there as the photographer was asked to leave the private property by the landowner or an authorised employee thereof.
Any kind of resistance would quite possibly have quite rightly led to the photographer being physically removed from the park (the park likely have security staffed trained and licensed to do this) and having his equipment similarly ejected after him.
There's a time and a place to stand your ground but when photographing on private property without prior permission that is not it.
...Unless it clearly states on the entrance that no flash photography allowed then all he can do is advise you to stop using your flashgun and give a reasonable reason to do so.
I Wonder.
As far as I am aware there are not many "no flash photography" signs next to roads (for example). I would hope that for most people it would be common sense as to do so may cause distraction and possibly an incident (note I do not say accident).
This facility presumably has been set up for the skaters primarilly. I would hope that if people who wanted to take pictures in considerate way they would be welcome, but it seems a bit off to potentially cause danger to them.
A little consideration and common sense is a wonderful thing.
(Dons Nomex underware)
Asha said:oh for goodness sake, are photographers only allowed to shoot images within their own homes for not wanting to cause upset, fear or harm to others.....I, like many people suffer with hayfever...perhaps I should demand that the local shop refrains from selling certain plants this year in case I have a reaction!!!!!.....best of luck with your project, sounds like you may need it!!
The photographer had entered private property in the form of the skatepark and attempted to take photos of people who it has never been stated knew the photographer or had given their permission. That is actually neither here nor there as the photographer was asked to leave the private property by the landowner or an authorised employee thereof.
Any kind of resistance would quite possibly have quite rightly led to the photographer being physically removed from the park (the park likely have security staffed trained and licensed to do this) and having his equipment similarly ejected after him.
There's a time and a place to stand your ground but when photographing on private property without prior permission that is not it.
Also there is the arguement about the place being private if the general public are allowed to use it, but that has been bought up in other threads.
legally its private property if its owned by a private individual or organisation. unless you mean council owned,
That's the only part I'd disagree with. I'm pretty sure that there's no right of public access to a piece of land or property just because it is council owned.
Think about schools, swimming pools, yards where council vehicles are stored, the public have no right of access to these places.
Edit: As stated in the first post on this page, public parks are usually council owned and the public are given the right of free access.
It'd be interesting to find out just how much of a right that free access to parkland is and I'm sure that it only applies in very specific areas/under very specific land usage terms.
Look at it another way, the public have no right of access to the cash office of the local authority leisure centre just because the land and property are owned by the council, they are granted access to the appropriate areas of the property by the owner/council.
when i said 'council owned' i meant in specific relation to the situation, since i wasent entirely sure whether it was a private pay to use skatepark or some sort of local council affair. private property is private property, council or not, but im fairly sure if its a local park the rules are generally pretty lax, though im sure that isent a legal requirement
pretty sure that if you have the right of public access that only covers getting in, they can still kick you out, but im trying to speculate on whether its actually in the councils rule set or whether its just some staff member having a bad day
What I would say though is that once you accept that private property is private property, council or not, then there's little point in considering whether the rules about no flash photography exist or it was just a staff member was having a bad day. If it's private property the owner or appointed representative can remove you/request that you remove yourself for whatever reason they like.
If the OP really believes he was wronged he could take up the matter with the council but I'd speculate that as it'd be a case of one person's word against another's, he wouldn't get very far and may in fact do himself more harm than good in relation to gaining access to council owned property to do photography in future.
So where does that leave speed cameras....![]()
Did not read the last page . But as it is quite fast sport you would be shooting on drive and multi flash surely? so that will be 3 to 5 flash bursts a time... Rare that anyone fires one shoot at a. time. So maybe they have a point. when I did press work I fire a burst with strobe flash. 4/5 frames a second.
With skate park you would should shot bursts or you could miss the shot.
---Pointing at the back of the vehicle or using infra-red flashes on the newer ones.
Marts said:Well put Asha, the country has gone mad and full of jobsworths.