Last week I took a ton of pictures a few of which turned out spectacular and I decided to edit and print. Well, I have printed at pro labs for many years now (and I recently posted a thread in the film photography forum on digital c-tone printing for film users (or digital)) ; however, I have never had an experience like the one I had on Sunday. I edited a few of my pictures and had them sharpened for inkjet printing in Nik Sharpener pro. The images were taken with my D200 and a Sigma 15-30mm lens. I was paranoid about leaving my $250 16GB CF card with the guy at Walmart so I decided to burn my image files onto a DVD. I just wanted to make a few prints to see how they would look (I wasn't proofing anything in particular) so I wanted to get 15 8x10's made because they were pretty cheap. I hand the guy the disc and he says OK we'll get these to you in a little over an hour. I said I would pick them up later that afternoon and he says that's ok they'll take down my name and phone number and I could pick them up whenever. So I went and did some errands
(this was the morning by the way) and so forth. I had company at home when I got a phone call from Walmart at 4:00 o' clock. "Sir. There's a problem and we can't print your pictures right now. We need you to come to the store if you want your pictures to be printed." I ask "ok Why?" and he says "I'm not particularly certain but you need to come to the store." Perplexed as I was I left some family members to attend our friends while I was gone. When I get to the photo center I ask what the problem is. A lady comes over and she says "you didn't take these pictures so we can't print them." I responded by logically asking "What do you mean I didn't take the pictures?" Apparently, she said that the lighting and colors looked professional and that it was a crime to print copyrighted images and whatnot. So then I clearly stated that I was the photographer and flashed my license. She didn't believe me . So... I go to the car and grab my camera and show it to her (a D200). She said it was a nice camera but it proved nothing. I even had the RAW files on the card but she said that I could have loaded them on there so it did not prove I had taken them and she had the right to deny printing services . It was probably the most arrogant comment I have heard in days-- who does she think she was implying I was not professional enough to take those pictures? And who does she think she was challenging the validity of RAW files? How do you illegally obtain raw files? You don't. So I ended up having a long fight with her and her manager. She ended up calling the district walmart office and basically they told her I could print out a waiver that I would sign to affirm that I was the photographer. I guess the photographers in the area must be pretty bad if they haven't seen nice bokeh before . So if you ever print at walmart carry a disclosure with you.