It is the act of publishing that causes written work to be copyrighted and for 
craft it is the exhibition or selling of the work that copyrights this.  From 
the research that I have seen this is the same for all legal systems based on 
the UK or European systems or which have origins in the UK system or European 
systems (such as The US and Australia)

Certainly the fact that the pricking has been published would cause it to come 
under copyright.

Creative works do not have to necessarily be published to fall under copyright 
protection.  If I write a sing and play it to you and yeas later a major part 
of your song happens to be the same or reasonably similar to my original I can 
claim infringement. I have to prove earlier authorship and that you had access 
to my material. In addition there would be liability of your friend wrote a 
piece based on my work but had not head mine directly but had heard a version 
from you that you sang remembering mine.  There would be a joint but not equal 
liability there.

Imitation may be the best form of flattery but it also carries liability.

By published a photograph of her work in the 1920s and it being clearly stated 
that she was they designer of the work, Miss Channer deminstrated copyright

Kind Regards

Liz Baker

> On 7 Jan 2014, at 16:08, [email protected] wrote:
> 
> Copyright law is different in the US versus Britain, and I  don't know 
> anything about British copyright law.
> Is it the case that Miss Channer went through the formal  process of 
> copyrighting the design of the mat? If so at what date?
> Devon

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