Policies & trust
Clear terms for considered work.
These plain-language policies explain how the studio handles inquiries, print orders, images, and collaboration. Replace the contact details and have a qualified attorney review them before your public launch.
Privacy notice
We collect only what helps us respond or fulfill an order.
Contact forms collect the name, email, organization, and message you choose to send. Print orders are processed by Stripe and the selected print lab; Casually Amused does not receive or store card numbers or security codes. We use this information to respond, fulfill a purchase, prevent abuse, and maintain required business records.
You may request access, correction, or deletion of inquiry information by contacting the studio. We retain information only for as long as needed for the request, order, legal obligations, or dispute handling.
Print shop
Physical editions, made to order.
Casually Amused print-shop editions are physical prints only. Product size, paper, edition details, pricing, delivery regions, and estimated production time are shown through the connected checkout and print-lab catalog. Colors can vary between screens and finished prints.
If an item arrives damaged, contact us with your order number and photographs of the packaging and print within 14 days. Because prints are made to order, returns for change of mind are not guaranteed. Refunds are reviewed individually; a refund does not automatically stop a print already in production.
Licensing & use
Buying a print does not transfer copyright.
Casually Amused retains copyright in its photographs, films, writing, software, and site materials unless a written agreement says otherwise. A physical print is for personal display only. Editorial, commercial, nonprofit, exhibition, publication, social-media, and AI-training use require written permission or a separate license.
Site terms
Use the work with care and context.
Do not copy, scrape, republish, train models on, or misrepresent the work without permission. Public reporting and archival work may depict real events and people; captions, context, and corrections matter. If you believe something is inaccurate or infringes your rights, contact the studio with enough detail to review it.