Stock Footage

License, organize, and integrate stock footage while following legal and technical requirements.

Overview

Stock footage refers to pre-existing video materials licensed for use within a production, including archival footage, environmental plates, specialty imagery, or other externally sourced visual assets. This page outlines the policies, approval considerations, licensing expectations, and workflow requirements associated with incorporating stock footage into student projects.

Because stock footage involves both creative and legal considerations, productions must ensure that outside materials are used appropriately, documented properly, and integrated thoughtfully into the project. Learning how to evaluate licensing restrictions, visual consistency, and workflow compatibility helps students better understand the professional standards surrounding third-party media usage in film and post-production environments.

Limitations on Use of Stock Footage

As a school, our primary focus is on the creation of original work. The emphasis is therefore on students creating all the imagery for their films themselves, rather than relying on stock footage libraries. Educationally, this helps students learn the process of creating original imagery, and the labor and resources that are needed to accomplish that. This helps students better understand the value of intellectual property, as their focus is more on creating intellectual property from scratch than on “borrowing” work created by others.

The process of clearing the rights for stock footage also informs the school’s policies. Many stock footage resources have inaccurate or misleading copyright information. For example, sites may claim that footage is in the public domain when it is not. To work through all the potential copyright and licensing issues with stock footage can be a lengthy and laborious process for both students and faculty. On many of our production cycles, there either isn’t sufficient time to do this or the time could be better spent focusing on other aspects of the production.

For these reasons, stock footage use is limited to F2, FC, and MC projects. Stock footage is not allowed on F1, F3, M1, M2, or M3 projects.

F2 • FC • MC

  • Stock footage is allowed.
  • All stock footage needs to be cleared by the Head of Production, to ensure that we have the proper rights to use the footage.
  • If stock footage is going to appear on camera during production — e.g., imagery on a television within a scene — the footage needs to be cleared before the start of principal photography. If stock footage is added during post-production, the footage needs to be clear before picture lock.
  • Stock footage can only be purchased with CMPA funds. Students are not permitted to purchase stock footage with personal funds.
  • Stock footage that is already owned by the CMPA, such as media that was originally shot for another FSU film, may be utilized. Please allow two weeks of turnaround on any such requests, in case the media files need to be pulled from the archive.

F1 • F3 • M1 • M2 • M3

  • Stock footage is NOT allowed.
  • All footage appearing on screen during the running time of these projects needs to be created by students during the assigned production days. This includes any content that needs to appear on screens within shots — e.g., a news broadcast that appears on a television within the scene. Producers will need to build time into the production schedule to create this embedded content during the assigned production days.