Thursday, July 30, 2009

Many Benefits to Sharing Family and Community Historical Society Photos Online

The ability to share on the Internet is a powerful thing. Images, ideas, news, music, product information, and you name it.

A meaningful opportunity for families is to easily unlock the sharing potential of the many photos now being held by a single family member in a shoebox, dresser drawer, or traditional album or scrapbook. By digitizing these closely held images and placing them online, the extended family can share, print, and download the digital files for their own creative project purposes.

The images can be easily shared by distant family members as a basis for gathering image identification information and genealogical color. The act of sharing online can reveal a particular family member's interest in coordinating an effort to better organize a family tree and the history around it. For more online family image sharing ideas and thoughts, read the article Sharing Possibilities Expand with Digital Images at LocalArchiver.com.

Community historical and genealogical societies have similar opportunities by developing or expanding their online image sharing activities. Placing images online clearly expands the viewing potential and can help the society meet its community history education objectives, generate additional interest in society activities, boost membership interest, and likely help in fundraising activities.

For additional ideas and guides to scanning, preserving, and sharing photos and documents, visit LocalArchiver.com.

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Online Image Galleries - Many Options With or Without a Website

Many community historical societies have a desire to establish or strengthen their web presence. Cost and volunteer web design experience have both been challenges. As community education and collection sharing are typical society missions, finding ways to share collection images is often a priority goal.

There are many alternatives, and even combinations of alternatives, available to expand online image sharing activities. A society need not have a website or volunteer web design expertise to get started.

Societies with some expertise and a website may still find it advantageous to expand their current image display activities, or even to market some special images as a fundraising activity by using inexpensive third party services available online.

If any member of a community historical or genealogical society can place scanned images in a folder on their own computer, the society already has the ability to create an online image gallery. Beyond that, additional sharing and fundraising options are numerous.

For some image gallery examples, ideas, and suggestions, visit the article on Sharing Photos and Documents in Image Galleries on the Internet at LocalArchiver.com.

Friday, July 17, 2009

Prepaid Scanning - Unlock the Family Photos Being Held Captive

When family photo collections are passed along, it is often the case that one family member, perhaps a sibling or cousin, ends up with the bulk of the collection that includes photos that are most important to individual members of the family.

Even with the best of intentions, the sibling or cousin may just not get around to sorting and/or scanning the images for distribution.

I was chatting with a friend over a barbecue grill last night and he mentioned that a cousin had several of his childhood photos held captive. He had previously offered to buy the cousin a scanner to get her started, but he was not taken up on the offer.

As an alternative, I suggested that he canvas other family members who may feel the same way and that he ask them to contribute to a bulk prepaid scanning plan at one of the major scanning services.

I suggested that for the price of a nice dinner, he and some other family members can get their hands on all of the photo images held captive by the good intentioned, but procrastinating cousin.

Both ScanDigital and ScanCafe have programs which allow someone to purchase prepaid scanning. The scanning services will then send a gift card or even a box to the cousin or sibling with instructions to simply fill it up and use the pre-printed mailing label.

What could be simpler for my friend? What could be easier for the cousin? What could be more important for you?

This pre-paid service as a gift for parents is also a great way to get the family photos preserved and shared before they wind up with a single sibling or cousin.

For additional thoughts on scanning images, and photo preservation and sharing, visit LocalArchiver.com.

Monday, July 6, 2009

Protecting Treasured Images - Family and Historical Society Photo Preservation

When famed photographer Ansel Adams was once asked which of his wife or his negatives he would first save from a burning house, his reply was thoughtful. "My wife, she could help me get the negs out!"

Ansel had a plan, and the rest of us should as well. Many families and community historical societies could do a much better job in planning to protect against a disaster. A bit of thoughtful disaster planning can also help to develop overall preservation and sharing priorities.

A logical first step is to develop a good sense of what you have in your collection. Although a worthy goal, I am not necessarily suggesting a complete assessment and cataloging. Rather, a rough idea of what categories are located where.

The next step is to visualize the potential pain associated with the loss of certain categories, and then develop a plan to best protect these most important categories. Perhaps your historical society has certain categories that best reflect your mission. Perhaps family photos of the immediate family are deemed more important than high school yearbooks and other memorabilia.

Thinking about what would be most tragic to lose can help you to develop priorities and a plan to protect your most treasured images. Developing priorities is important to many families and community historical societies as they must allocate limited time and budgets.

In many cases, there are things that can be done quickly and inexpensively to protect at least a portion of a collection. If a family or historical society has a portion of their collection already in digital format, an easy protective step is to duplicate the files to a CD, DVD, or memory stick, and to place the backups off premise with a family relative, society officer, or in a safe deposit box.

When considering priorities, it is also important to remember that the "importance" and "quality" of images do vary. If an image simply does not "speak" to us any longer, it should probably be assigned a lower priority in our preservation activities.

Giving some honest thought to what you would miss most in your image collection in the event of a calamity and total loss will help you prioritize your preservation and collection activities, and better understand where you should focus your energy, time, and money in photo and document preservation and sharing activities.

Like most things in life, it may be that the 80/20 rule can be applied to image preservation and sharing. Perhaps roughly 20% of your collection deserves 80% of your efforts, and 80% of the audience for the images is most interested in roughly 20% of the collection.

In a recent culling and scanning project of our family's photo prints, we eliminated about 80% by weight and feel pretty good about it. It was interesting that my wife did the first cull, and I did a secondary review of eliminated prints. In each and every case, when I had a question about keeping a print she had eliminated, she was able to quickly produce a better print of the related person, place, or event. Indeed, we only needed the best family reunion group photo from ten years ago, not all ten photos taken at the time.

Prints that remain have been scanned, duplicate CDs are in the safe deposit box, and digital images are being shared in a variety of ways. We do have the originals stored in archival boxes, but take considerable comfort in knowing that duplicate images are always available and have been shared more widely.

For additional tips on preservation and sharing activities for families and historical or genealogical societies, visit LocalArchiver.com.