In May 1999 Joseph Lelyveld, executive editor at the New York Times, announced new image guidelines for the paper. Any adjustments made to the pictures must be similar to those that were possible in the pre-digital era like burning and dodging, which lighten and darken sections of a photo, the policy states. In cases where the paper creates a collage or montage of images the effect must be "unmistakable to the reader."

In addition the Times’ computers have pre-set calibration for a picture’s color and clarity on the page to make images look their best in newsprint. Unintentionally, the set tone and color values prevent an editor or photographer from making too many changes. "There’s no eyeballing it, really," O’Connor says.

Bush's head is oversized to indicate the photo is not real.

Stephen Braswell, photo administrator at Newsweek magazine, says images are dealt with on a case by case basis, but in general news photographs remain unaltered and illustrations must be obvious. On the cover of the Feb. 19 issue, George Bush's head appeared too large for his body to help mark that the image was created and not an actual photo. "If the head and body were proportionate, it could have been libelous," Braswell says.

At Time magazine designers know they must go to higher-ups before they touch a thing. "We start with real photos and if there is a real reason [to alter it] it must get ok’d by the senior editor before we send it to the art department to get altered," Roberts says.

And after the handshake debacle, the Daily News has become much more sensitive. "We do not alter news photographs," Ruis says. The tabloid has also increased the size of its photo bylines at the bottom of images to avoid confusion.

Even the courts have become involved. In 1995 the Massachusetts Supreme Court ruled that doctored photos are not protected under the First Amendment, after a woman sued a local political opponent who superimposed her face on pornographic photos.



To beginning of story

 

 

An excerpt from the New York Times' photo policy:

"Images in our pages that purport to depict reality must be genuine in every way. No people or objects may be added, rearranged, reversed, distorted or removed from a scene (except for the recognized practice of cropping to omit extraneous outer portions).

Adjustments of color or gray scale should be limited to those minimally necessary for clear and accurate reproduction, analogous to the "burning" and "dodging" that
formerly took place in darkroom processing of images.

Pictures of news situations must not be posed. In the cases of collages, montages, portraits, fashion or home design illustrations, fanciful contrived situations and demonstrations of how a device is used, our intervention should be unmistakable to the reader, and unmistakably free of intent to deceive.

Captions and credits should
further acknowledge our intervention if the slightest doubt is possible. The design director, a masthead editor or the news desk should be consulted on doubtful cases or proposals for exceptions."

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