#1
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OT: How are you storing/organizing your old paper photos?
My beginning of the year project is to deal with 2 large plastic bins of old family photos from the 1980s to 1990s. I have sorted out and pitched about 75% of these photos. Before I go further, I like to get this forum’s collective wisdom on this project.
All of my digital photos are on iCloud. There are some old family black and white family photos that I would like to keep for the family. Would love to know what our forum members are doing to keep yesterday’s treasures for the future. |
#2
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I would digitize everything you want to keep. The paper and chemicals aren't going to last forever.
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#3
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Buy a scanner, some beer, and block off an afternoon.
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#4
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If you do not want to buy a (good) scanner, any good graphics house, etc will scan the images for you, on a much higher quality machine.
If there are any of the paper originals that are really worth still keeping, then even though it wouldn't reverse any contamination from 1980 or so to today, good archival envelopes and boxes are pretty inexpensive from companies such as Light Impressions, etc. for future storage. |
#5
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This is a solid recommendation.
Also, if storing digitally, there is the risk of inevitable hard drive failure or cloud storage issues. I store old photos in photo albums, and print photo books off digital images. Otherwise, it never gets looked at. Hard drive just becomes a virtual shoebox where images get lost. Quote:
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#6
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The local graphics house is definitely worth the cost (especially if one has to buy a new (cheap = lousy; good = $$$) scanner) just to do the job at home any decent justice.
Quote:
iCloud, Dropbox, etc are OK as a 3rd resource, preceded by hard drive #1 and external back-up hard drive #2. I would never trust iCloud, Dropbox, etc, as primary storage. Another excellent suggestion. The book solution is really a good one, and makes the overall tedious archiving job more creative, fun, personal in creating the subjects/topics and then designing/organizing them. |
#7
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Quote:
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#8
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digital frames set to random shuffle are pretty nifty, especially when you have a wide range/variety of photos.
__________________
http://less-than-epic.blogspot.com/ |
#9
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Quote:
For Christmas this year I gave wife and daughter-in-law photo albums, loaded with 100 or so 'family' photos..they both cried... Quote:
__________________
Chisholm's Custom Wheels Qui Si Parla Campagnolo Last edited by oldpotatoe; 01-13-2020 at 08:07 AM. |
#10
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OT: How are you storing/organizing your old paper photos?
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Better use optical disk. Magnetic media has the shortest lifespan. I've got boxes of photos and slides in a closet that I haven't looked at in 30 years. This is something I need to do, but just never got around to it. Last edited by MikeD; 01-13-2020 at 09:58 AM. |
#11
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if you really want to save something long-term, use multiple media, multiple copies, don't store them all in one place. |
#12
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Photoscanner - Epson V550 at minimum. I was able to get one off Craigslist for like $50
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#13
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I appreciate and read these suggestions with great interest. Can anyone provide more specifics about secure image generation, storage, and sharing?
I am apprehensive about the choices having seen so much technology become obsolete and the various conditions of web-based storage and access.
__________________
You always have a plan on the bus... |
#14
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Better yet find a friend who has a scanner, buy two cases of beer (one for them one for you) and block off an afternoon
Does your city have a tool lending library? They might have a nice scanner to check out. Ps. If you happen to find the negatives in the boxes of prints you can do this easier |
#15
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Go figure, unrelated to this thread, I was about to order one of these
https://www.irisusainc.com/extra-lar...p-xlpho-violet and empty out the photo albums sitting in a box. After retirement, my dad scanned our dozens of slide carrousels. Definitely did not take an afternoon, probably more like weeks/months. 80-100 slides per x at least 50 wheels... and slides are so finicky. The old paper ones, you want to clean them before scanning etc. Regarding obsolescence, the easiest thing is copying my photo folder to every large hard drive when I replace it. As others said, the cloud + local copies. Yes, free cloud services come and go, but I think google & amazon are here to stay. Both have free accounts depending if you have accounts with them. Amazon is free unlimited storage at original size. I haven't actually done it yet, but one of these days... |
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