Copyright Notice

All copyright, design rights, and other intellectual property rights (registered and unregistered) in and on Where’s Your Head? belong to Where’s Your Head? and Evelyn Reid, all of aforementioned protected under Canadian and international copyright law. Nothing mentioned herein grants you a right or license to use any design right or copyright-owned photography or text featured on Where’s Your Head? without explicit written permission from the owners of Where’s Your Head?.

With that being said…

What Where’s Your Head? Content Can You Use? And How Can You Use It?

  • You are welcome to do as we do and share links to any of our content on social media and by email. In fact, that’s amazing! Thank you! We’re thrilled you enjoy our work and are spreading the word on Where’s Your Head?.
  • You are welcome to quote excerpts of up to 100 words of our content in your own blog posts, articles, presentations, and documents as long as you honor our Content Attribution policy:

1) attribute “Evelyn Reid of Where’s Your Head?” as the source

2) link to the original Where’s Your Head? article post you’re referencing, and

3) showcase the link to the URL of the specific article post you’re referencing either within the excerpt you’ve chosen or placed one line immediately above or below the excerpt so that your readers can quickly and easily refer to the original piece.

  • Photos taken by Evelyn Reid and Clint Lewis featured on Where’s Your Head? are protected under Canadian and international copyright law and are thus not to be republished without the photographer’s explicit permission. If you wish to purchase an original photo, please state your request in writing by email.

  • As thrilled as we are that you love our content, republishing a full Where’s Your Head? article without our explicit written permission is strictly prohibited. Google is not a fan duplicate content on the web and is known to penalize the copier and even the copied. Repurposing or repackaging our hard work for your own commercial gain without our explicit written permission is also strictly prohibited. Using original Where’s Your Head? content to sell a product or service or to drive traffic to sponsored links without getting our explicit written permission hurts the author and the Where’s Your Head? brand. Exceptions are occasionally and carefully made. If you wish to purchase an article for reprint, please state your request in writing by email.
  • Refuse to post or publish Where’s Your Head? articles and ideas as if they’re your own, without attribution to the site and author. Hard-working, ethical people offering positive contributions to society can lose their homes, livelihoods, and ability to support a family over this kind of behavior. It can take days of research, writing, fact-checking, and experimental study analysis –made possible by years of experience and thousands of dollars spent on formal study– to produce one single post. Spending five minutes copying and pasting someone else’s work and then claiming it is as your own is wrong on every level. It’s the same as stealing a piece of that author’s life. Now we’re positively happy that you love what we do. Please show it by sharing an original link to the work instead, following our Content Attribution Policy. Positive opportunities arise from positive actions.

We thank you profusely for your support.

Copyright Notice

All copyright, design rights, and other intellectual property rights (registered and unregistered) in and on Where’s Your Head? belong to Where’s Your Head? and Evelyn Reid, all of aforementioned protected under Canadian and international copyright law. Nothing mentioned herein grants you a right or license to use any design right or copyright-owned photography or text featured on Where’s Your Head? without explicit written permission from the owners of Where’s Your Head?.

With that being said…

What Where’s Your Head? Content Can You Use? And How Can You Use It?

  • You are welcome to do as we do and share links to any of our content on social media and by email. In fact, that’s amazing! Thank you! We’re thrilled you enjoy our work and are spreading the word on Where’s Your Head?.
  • You are welcome to quote excerpts of up to 100 words of our content in your own blog posts, articles, presentations, and documents as long as you honor our Content Attribution policy:

1) attribute “Evelyn Reid of Where’s Your Head?” as the source

2) link to the original Where’s Your Head? article post you’re referencing, and

3) showcase the link to the URL of the specific article post you’re referencing either within the excerpt you’ve chosen or placed one line immediately above or below the excerpt so that your readers can quickly and easily refer to the original piece.

  • Photos taken by Evelyn Reid and Clint Lewis featured on Where’s Your Head? are protected under Canadian and international copyright law and are thus not to be republished without the photographer’s explicit permission. If you wish to purchase an original photo, please state your request in writing by email.

  • As thrilled as we are that you love our content, republishing a full Where’s Your Head? article without our explicit written permission is strictly prohibited. Google is not a fan duplicate content on the web and is known to penalize the copier and even the copied. Repurposing or repackaging our hard work for your own commercial gain without our explicit written permission is also strictly prohibited. Using original Where’s Your Head? content to sell a product or service or to drive traffic to sponsored links without getting our explicit written permission hurts the author and the Where’s Your Head? brand. Exceptions are occasionally and carefully made. If you wish to purchase an article for reprint, please state your request in writing by email.
  • Refuse to post or publish Where’s Your Head? articles and ideas as if they’re your own, without attribution to the site and author. Hard-working, ethical people offering positive contributions to society can lose their homes, livelihoods, and ability to support a family over this kind of behavior. It can take days of research, writing, fact-checking, and experimental study analysis –made possible by years of experience and thousands of dollars spent on formal study– to produce one single post. Spending five minutes copying and pasting someone else’s work and then claiming it is as your own is wrong on every level. It’s the same as stealing a piece of that author’s life. Now we’re positively happy that you love what we do. Please show it by sharing an original link to the work instead, following our Content Attribution Policy. Positive opportunities arise from positive actions.

We thank you profusely for your support.