Talk:Iain Macnab

Image posting rules
User dnw has asked me whether it is acceptable to post an image of a Macnab print that he owns.

I'm not an expert on the Wikipedia image use policy. This is described in Image use policy, but this does not discuss photographs of artworks that you own but did not create. As well as Wikipedia policy, you need to obey the laws where you live. As I understand it, under English law you do not necessarily have the right to distribute images of an artwork that you own. Scottish or Australian law could be different.

You could ask the question on Image use policy(talk), or just wait for an expert to post a response here. There are a lot of people lurking out there, especially if you label the page as within a popular WikiProject. Verbcatcher (talk) 13:44, 10 February 2014 (UTC)

MacNab or Macnab
I have standardised on Macnab, on the basis of a letter in The Observer newspaper on 17 May 1936 from Iain Macnab (not clear if this is our Iain Macnab): "I would also point out that the Anglicised form of Mac-an-Abba is Macnab (sometimes Macnabb) and not MacNab, as an extra capital would be more correctly used for the second A and not the N." Verbcatcher (talk) 18:10, 10 February 2014 (UTC)

Date of The Student's book of wood-engraving
An earlier editor had given the publication date of The Student's book of wood-engraving as 1938, without giving a reference. The Canadian Library and Archives gives the date as 1947. The 1938 date is given by Amazon and by Google books (they might have got the date from Wikipedia). Perhaps there were two editions. I have judged the Canadian source to be more reliable, and have given the date as 1947. Verbcatcher (talk) 01:46, 15 February 2014 (UTC)
 * I have found another reference in the Canadian Library and Archives with a publication date of 1938, and I conclude that there was a reprint (or a new edition) in 1947. Verbcatcher (talk) 01:52, 15 February 2014 (UTC)