Parents Can Now Create Their Own Winnie The Pooh Story Legally
So, Dad, if you want to dress your kids up as Pooh and Eeyore for a homemade Pooh adventure you shoot on your iPhone, have at it. If you want to write about the teddy bear’s next big picnic or heart-to-heart and self-publish the results, now’s the time. But there’s a catch. Make that catches. For example, you’ll need to steer clear of Tigger. Why? The U.S. copyright law that put Winnie-the-Pooh in the public domain dates to 1926, and Tigger didn’t meet Pooh — or the world — until 1928 when Milne published The House at Pooh Corner....