Masterclass: Legal Essentials for Creative Businesses

Masterclass: Legal Essentials for Creative Businesses

Masterclass: Legal Essentials for Creative Businesses

By Fashion Capital UK

Location

Online

About this event

  • Event lasts 1 hour


📅 Thursday, 8th May | ⏰ 10:00 AM - 11:00 AM | 📍 Online via Zoom

Hosted by Kevin Withane & Nick Gould, Partner at Impact Lawyers
Demystifying UK Law for Creatives, Start-Ups and Entrepreneurs.

1. Welcome & Introduction

Kevin & Nick:

  • Quick intros – who we are, why we’re passionate about helping creative businesses.
  • This is a practical, jargon-free guide to help you protect your work, your business, and your peace of mind.
  • UK law-focused, designed for the real-life challenges you face.

2. Contract Law: The Essentials

What makes a contract legally binding?

  • Offer – A clear proposal.
  • Consideration – Something of value exchanged.
  • Acceptance – Agreement to the offer.

Why it matters:

  • Protects both parties. Prevents misunderstandings.
  • Verbal agreements can be binding, but written contracts give you security.
  • Always define scope, deadlines, payments, and ownership of work.

3. IP & Copyright: Protect What You Create

Copyright:

  • Automatically protects original creative work (e.g., designs, photos, content).
  • No registration needed in the UK – but you must prove ownership.

Trademarks & Design Rights:

  • Logos, brand names, slogans = register them as trademarks.
  • Product shape/design = protectable via unregistered or registered design rights.

Tip: In collaborations, confirm who owns what in writing before starting.

4. Negligence & Product Liability

The Tort of Negligence:

  • You have a duty of care to your customers.
  • If your product causes harm due to poor quality or safety issues, you could be held liable.

What you can do:

  • Put quality control and safety checks in place.
  • Get public liability insurance.
  • Use supplier contracts with clear responsibilities.

5. Business Structures: Know Your Set-Up

Choosing the right structure is essential from the start.

As a sole trader, you retain full control and profits, but you're personally liable for any business debts.

A partnership means shared responsibility and liability – both for the business and each other’s decisions.

Setting up as a limited company (Ltd) provides a separate legal identity, protecting personal assets if something goes wrong, but it comes with more admin and responsibilities.

If you’re running a social enterprise, a Community Interest Company (CIC) might be the right option – profits are reinvested for community benefit, and reporting obligations are higher.

6. Clear Communication: Your Best Legal Defence

Nick Gould:

  • So many legal disputes boil down to poor communication.
  • Put everything in writing. Be clear. Ask questions. Confirm agreements.
  • Whether you’re dealing with clients, partners, or suppliers – clarity beats assumption.

7. AOB & Open Q&A

Ask us anything:

  • Got a contract worry? Unsure about copyright? Thinking about your business structure?
  • This is your chance to ask legal questions in a friendly, no-judgement space.

🔗 Register now to secure your spot!

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    The UK’s #1 Portal for Fashion Education and Industry Knowledge

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