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The local stylist involved in a legal dispute with the Kentucky Derby Festival over the design of this year's Pegasus Pin said the situation is bigger than him. Officials with the Kentucky Derby Festival announced Thursday that it's being sued over the design of its 2019 logo.Stylist Andre Wilson, who helped design the 2018 uniform jacket, has filed a copyright claim because the organization used it in the design of this year's Pegasus Pin."Everything that's involved with that jacket that you see now, that they wonderfully enjoy, I did," Wilson said. "I have the emails to prove it. I have the videos to prove it."Wilson said he even has the copyright to the design of the now-iconic Derby Festival jacket. The pink blazer, with its Caribbean blue pegasus embroidery, was worn by KDF board members for the first time in 2018. "The festival fans were so excited about the jacket, and they loved it so much that they decided to make it the Derby pin," Wilson said. When the 2019 Pegasus Pin design was announced in February, festival officials said pin sales would make up 25 percent of the organization's income. "At first, I felt I was really honored and surprised, and then I was like, 'Hold on, let's do some math here,'" Wilson said. "I read they were projected to sell 250,000 pins at $6 a pin, so that's $1.5 million—and it was my design."Wilson filed and received an emergency copyright on the design. He then asked KDF for a royalty of $1 per pin, threatening legal action by April 5. "We take our branding very seriously and while we appreciate Mr. Wilson's role as a stylist, we will continue to defend our rights to promote the 2019 Pegasus Pin and use the Kentucky Derby Festival's trademarked logo and trade dress that was created years prior to Mr. Wilson’s involvement," a KDF official said in a statement.KDF responded with a lawsuit of its own, saying the logo and design was trademarked several years before Wilson became involved. Wilson said his proprietary design includes everything from the color to the shoulder pads, buttons and fabric, which he sourced from New York, Switzerland and China. He said at this point it's no longer about money—it's about intellectual property and artistic rights."When you design something, you put your heart and soul into it," Wilson said. "This is about every artist, every creative in the city. It won't just be me this time. Injustice for one of us is injustice for all of us."Wilson was paid $4,500 to design last year's jacket.When asked if he'll turn his copyright over to the KDF or file a lawsuit of his own, Wilson said he's still weighing his options.