Great video! I saw in Kittl's license agreement/policy that every public post can essentially be copied and reused by anyone, even for commercial purposes. Does this mean you can choose any template you find in the library and put it on one of your T-shirts in your store without any repercussions?
Thank you and yes that is a great question. You absolutely can use the templates on Kittl "as is" and upload them to a site like Redbubble or Teepublic. The problem would be if someone else did the same thing - then there would be two identical templates on Redbubble for example (listed by 2 different people). So it is possible that you could get a copyright strike (because Redbubble would not know or care where you got the template from - they would just see it as a duplicate listing). So I strongly encourage you to change something on the template (text, color, sizing, graphics, etc.) so that you avoid getting a copyright strike (not from Kittl, but from the print-on-demand site itself). I hope that helps!
@zenwatercooler Thanks a lot for your answer! Actually I was planning to use them for my own clothing store. But as you've said, it's in fact always better to modify some elements on these templates, instead of just copy pasting them and claiming the work of others as my own.
Great video! I saw in Kittl's license agreement/policy that every public post can essentially be copied and reused by anyone, even for commercial purposes. Does this mean you can choose any template you find in the library and put it on one of your T-shirts in your store without any repercussions?
Thank you and yes that is a great question. You absolutely can use the templates on Kittl "as is" and upload them to a site like Redbubble or Teepublic. The problem would be if someone else did the same thing - then there would be two identical templates on Redbubble for example (listed by 2 different people). So it is possible that you could get a copyright strike (because Redbubble would not know or care where you got the template from - they would just see it as a duplicate listing). So I strongly encourage you to change something on the template (text, color, sizing, graphics, etc.) so that you avoid getting a copyright strike (not from Kittl, but from the print-on-demand site itself). I hope that helps!
@zenwatercooler Thanks a lot for your answer! Actually I was planning to use them for my own clothing store. But as you've said, it's in fact always better to modify some elements on these templates, instead of just copy pasting them and claiming the work of others as my own.
Sounds good But you can't use it on a mobile phone or tablet like you can canva.
I do use Kittl on my iPad (using Safari browser), but I prefer using it on my actual laptop. Maybe someday they will have an app!
Soon. It’s coming.