One of my most treasured possessions is the set list from the second gig I ever went to. It was Counting Crows, on their first European tour, in Köln. My sister, my best friend and I got to go Without Our Parents. There was a road trip. There might have been a cheeky Pils or two. The band’s set was a mesmerizing introduction, for me, to the power of live performance in a tiny space. We made it into the TV footage. It was a special, memorable occasion in every possible way.

But best of all was getting the set list at the end, in the iconic handwriting that had featured on their first album cover. In those heady days before Twitter and Instagram made our idols as accessible to us as our own friends, that handwriting was a connection, a new way of identifying or finding an affinity with the writer, another characteristic to mimic. For a short period, I tried very hard to copy that handwriting for my own mix tapes, letters to friends, and the occasional essay.

So this recent news story caught my attention: the SongwritersFonts website, which provided freely available fonts based on the handwriting of musical heroes Kurt Cobain, Leonard Cohen, David Bowie, John Lennon and Serge Gainsbourg, has been shut down after threats of legal action in relation to intellectual property rights.

john lennon handwritten lyrics
Original lyrics to John Lennon’s ‘In my life’ By Suraj Rajan [CC BY-SA 3.0, from Wikimedia Commons
This strikes me both as a misery-guts overreaction (contrast to Matt Groening, who seems happy to allow many Simpsons / Groening fonts to be made available) but, perhaps more importantly, scare tactics. The creation of a font is a manual drawing / design process (special shout out to my friend Gary L, who was the first person I knew to do this for his own handwriting). If you draw a new font, you can copyright it. But can handwriting itself be copyrighted? The musicians’ estates (or one of them) may have managed to spook the designers of SongwritersFonts with their cease and desist messages, but is there actually a legal case to answer? The fonts that were on the site are new creations reflecting samples of the artists’ handwriting; there might be a brand issue (in terms of the website’s ability to use the musicians’ names to promote its content) but I don’t think the copyright angle sticks.

The Scholarly Kitchen audience seems like the right Venn diagram of publishing / music / copyright geeks to consult. What do you think?

Charlie Rapple

Charlie Rapple

Charlie Rapple is co-founder of Kudos, which showcases research to accelerate and broaden its reach and impact. She is also Vice Chair of UKSG and serves on the Editorial Board of UKSG Insights. @charlierapple.bsky.social, x.com./charlierapple and linkedin.com/in/charlierapple. In past lives, Charlie has been an electronic publisher at CatchWord, a marketer at Ingenta, a scholarly comms consultant at TBI Communications, and associate editor of Learned Publishing.

Discussion

5 Thoughts on "Can Handwriting Be Copyrighted?"

I do not believe that in the US fonts are properly the subject of copyright. I believe they are the textbook example of that which is utilitarian and not copyrightable. Please, someone persuade me otherwise!

Typefaces can’t be copyrighted, but fonts (as software) can (https://www.lawyers.com/legal-info/intellectual-property/intellectual-property-licensing/company-sues-over-unauthorized-use-of-its-fonts.html).

How this plays out when a company makes a font (software) out of what could be called a typeface (the handwriting), I couldn’t say. The posting from the font creators didn’t state the legal reasoning from the estates that sent the cease and desist letter (I assume at their counsel’s advice).

You are correct. No copyright for typefaces. See Compendium of U.S. Copyright Office Practices, Section 313.3(D) Typeface and Mere Variations of Typographic Ornamentation .

While you cannot register a claim of copyright in a font, you can apply to register a claim of copyright in the software that makes the font applicable to a text. Of course, the software itself would need to meet the criteria for copyrightability of computer programs. Mitch Tuchman, Morningstar Law Group.

I am confused. To me it seems there are two completely different legal issues being conflated here. The “text” of the musicians is obviously covered by copyright. So how you get from those texts to a font begs the question. And if I were one of those musicians (or the owner of the those handwritten texts) I would certainly resist that process unless there were appropriate licenses and compensation. Right?

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