One of my readers wrote with a request. He wants to use a picture I had posted as an illustration in a book he's writing. Since I blog for fun and not profit, I don't pay attention to things like trademarks and copyrights. But he's needing to find out who, if anyone, own's the copyright to it.
Here's the picture:
If anyone knows who owns this or how to find out, please comment.
Thank you hugs in advance.
try this: http://nachomolinablog.blogspot.com/2013/11/eowyn-tutorial.html
ReplyDeletehttps://www.saintjoanofarc.org/
ReplyDeleteCommenter 1 has it.
ReplyDeleteIt is "Eowyn vs the Witch King". Look at the background, that is a Nazgul there, nothing Joan of Arc would have ever fought. The artist is Nacho Molina.
Website:
www.nachomolinablog.blogspot.com
Unfortunately, in spanish.
The full image:
http://www.deviantart.com/art/EOWYN-vs-THE-WITCH-KING-341782587
A couple of people above found it as well:
ReplyDeletehttp://nachomolina.deviantart.com/art/EOWYN-vs-THE-WITCH-KING-341782587
Copyright or not, it is a cool picture, I hope he gets to use it. I have never seen it before.
ReplyDeleteThe painting is titled "Eowyn vs The Witch King" by Nacho Molina.
ReplyDeleteNacho Molina is a freelance fantasy artist living in Valencia, Spain. Contact him be sending email to Lordnatxet@msn.com.
ReplyDeleteIf you ever need to find an image, save a copy to your system. Go to Google Image search and then drag and drop the image from your system directly on to the Google Image search. Google will do the best it can to find a match. Here is what it found (http://img1.reactor.cc/pics/post/full/Eowyn-%D0%A0%D0%BE%D1%85%D0%B8%D1%80%D1%80%D0%B8%D0%BC-%D0%90%D1%82%D0%B0%D0%BD%D0%B8-%D0%90%D1%80%D0%B4%D0%B0-1749537.jpeg)
ReplyDeleteIf for whatever reason, Google doesn't find anything, then you can use https://tineye.com/. To find it.
just send me the money, we'll work it out later.
ReplyDeleteWhat a coincidence. My wife and I hosted an exchange student from Valencia, Spain, for a year, back in 1998. My wife's brother visited the city when he was in the Navy way back when, and also said that it is a beautiful city. Amaya, the girls name, was a dark haired spanish girl, who taught me to cook Paella. Her father was a mid level auto manufacturing executive. This image brings back fond memories. Not of the girl, but of the connection with the city.
ReplyDeleteIt looks like Boris Vallejo illustration.
ReplyDeleteit is way cool, whoever did it and whoever uses it....
ReplyDeletevaquero viejo
Yup, I was WRONG. I just did a fast google search, and that is what it came up with. #1comment wasn't up when I clicked. He was correct. What was amusing was that about half the links traced back to HERE, so it is not really popular on the web yet.
ReplyDelete