Posts Tagged ‘photographs’

Commercial Photographic Processes: The One-Hour Lab

Thursday, August 20th, 2009

A photograph is an image, a “graphic” created with light, “photos.” With the advent of digital photography, some of the lines have been blurred and shifted when considering the traditional definition of “photography”. The image that is created in the digital camera and saved to a card still needs the light aspect for its creation. However, the creation of the physical print no longer requires light-sensitive paper, numerous chemicals and arrangements for silver waste disposal.

Finishing my Library Science Master’s degree with the Archives and Records Management specialization in the middle of a tough economic time finds me back where I was before I ever left for college; the one-hour photo lab of a major retailer.  Except this time things are different.  There are no liquid chemicals.  We do not develop film.  There is no light sensitive paper or light-tight boxes to change under a black bag.  I’ve been out of the business for about 3 years and look how much has changed.  Any other 3 years from the 1970s to early 2000 and the only changes would include the speed of the machine, but not the basic process of the printing of the images.

Instead, there are instant print kiosks using thermal ribbon. Most of the prints come of off the laser printer which uses colored toner. Toner, I’ve learned, is colored powder containing polymers (plastics).  It is placed on the paper and then superheated to lock in the image.  It is much like a home color laser printer, only industrial-size and uses black, yellow, magenta and cyan toner cartridges. Other new additions to the previous lab I worked in are an in-house wide format color photo laser printer and Xerox color printer which assists in making more complicated products such as photo books and scrapbook pages.
When I learned that we were to have a dry lab at the store, I was thoroughly disappointed.  I enjoyed working with the chemicals and the challenge of loading paper or working with a complicated roll of film by depending on my sense of touch only.  Now, essentially, we literally only print pictures. Without the light-shining-on-chemically-treated-paper method, I’ve had to re-work my definitions in my head. While it may sound incredibly picky and insignificant to some, I do not believe that “we” at the lab create “photos” for customers anymore.  The customer creates the photograph that is saved to the digital media.  We create prints for them.

A question that may arise at this point is: “Is it possible to create “photographs” from digital media using the light sensitive process?” The answer is yes. It requires a hybrid machine, which was one of the first considerations of the lab I first worked at from 2001-2006. We used a Fuji machine that could accept digital files and print them onto light-sensitive photo paper, in addition to printing images from film negatives.  The current lab I’m at has the capability to create reprints from negatives as well as from slides, but the machine was not created nor set up with those original image-holding media in mind. The film scanner is now an accessory for the machine, whereas in the past that was the only way of getting an original image from the media to the paper.

Now, my curiosities are to test the longevity of each type of print processing and find the best in the long term.  In the near future, I hope to obtain prints from both processes, as well as from different types of machines and subject them to the elements in various types to assess their durability, paper quality and color fastedness.  That is for another time.

The Double Bind by Chris Bohjalian

Friday, January 2nd, 2009

I have discovered the miracle known as audio books within the past year.  I will drive between St. Paul/Mpls area to Madison visiting my family for the holidays and that can be a 5-6.5 hour trip depending an traffic and which interstate I choose to take.  This entry is partially inspired by Richard Cox’s blog, Reading Archives and partially by the content of the book itself.

This book is not “about” archives.  At least, it doesn’t say it is. I will also say that I am not finished with the story, I’m on CD 3 out of 5 and I’m saving the rest for my ride home on January 2 or 3.  These are the points that I am most interested in: The girl works at a homeless shelter and one of the elderly men that they had known for about a year passed away.  They had helped to get him an apartment of his own and when they cleaned it out, they found a box of photos that were among the few possession that he brought with him when he arrived.  Upon his death, the shelter director had gone to Laurel, our protagonist, to help her curate a show of the photos.  The elderly man had often talked about having a show someday and the director wanted to make sure he didn’t have family who would want the photos or copyright, etc.  Laurel is also chosen for her experience in photography and she prints out photos from the negatives and does some research on his former life before the shelter with clues from some of the older photographs.

While the genius in the writing is the other, more personal part of the story and the interconnectedness between herself and the elderly man, I was facinated by the writing and the understanding of the process of what she was doing.  First, this is the kind of archival work that I would like to find.  I have earned my photography minor, possibly putting more work into that than I did into my Spanish major.  Secondly, the steps of intense archival work are there.  She has no archival training, but she does have photographic knowledge.   There is description of her thought processes on how to store, selection of what to print, creating an inventory of the images and negatives as well as searching for copyright restrictions or anyone else who may hold copyright.

This book is not just a novel, but it also has documentation of how a non-archivally trained professional would go about taking care of a collection.  It is a little slow going at times and I do need to take a break after each CD or so, but the ties to the archival world are fairly strong.  If you are interested in reading/listening to it, however, I would suggest reading or re-reading The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald.  There are a lot of references to the characters/people of that book as well.

A Lesson in Appraisal (cont’d)

Tuesday, October 7th, 2008

I was given free reign to appraise the slides of the agricultural professor and after two solid days of working on them, I finished the initial appraisal.  I then moved along to a secondary appraisal.  Since the materials were in such a disarray to begin with, we had large, broad categories including “Germany and other European countries,” “Wisconsin,” “Hawaii and other US States,” and some smaller ones like “Flowers/Close-ups” and “Teaching/Photo Tech.”

There were about 30 carousels of slides that needed to be sleeved for easier viewing, which were placed into the appropriate category immediately afterward.  During the secondary appraisal stage, I sorted through each category, viewing about half of each box of slides to see if it contained images relevant to his work in agriculture.  If it did not (i.e. people-presumably family-fixing up an old house and picnicking, lots of tourist-like snapshots of buildings in a city or people-again presuming family-on a rafting trip) I moved it aside to the “Return to Family” box.

When I got to the end, there was still a “Unknown/Miscellaneous/Unsortable” box to be dealt with.  I go tthe curator at this time and we started sorting through that box together.  The first 10 minutes went alright until we got to a set of 35mm negatives that was sleeved.  The content of the negatives was a studio portrait session with a lady and two images at the end of her with her sweetheart.
“Hmmm… I think this should go in ‘Wisconsin.’” says the curator.
“I don’t know.  We don’t know who this it, its probably a family friend.” I replied, trying to swing it towards the family pile, wondering if this is really happening.
“Well, it looks like it he could’ve been taking passport photos for her.”
“Those don’t look like the type of poses for a passport.  Look, here she is with someone else,” indicating the ones of her and her sweetheart.  I’m also wondering why keeping some unnamed person’s studio shots of a passport photo would be relevant.
“We should really put this in ‘Wisconsin.’” He’s sincere about this.
I’m so confused that I’m getting frustrated. “What kind of research value does this have?” I was trying very hard no to sound as confused/frustrated as I was feeling.
“Well, she could be someone important.”

And that’s the point I engaged myself in some busywork and walked away, but my mind was reeling and I was so confused.  I was wondering if this guy ever DID appraisal.  Do all the appraising archivists appraise like this?  This isn’t how our practicum went.  Did I miss something?  And most frustrating of all, the thought that, Couldn’t every person in every photograph that comes through the archives be “someone important”?  Isn’t this what appraisal is about?  Deciding what has “enduring value”?  And making selection decisions based off of that?  How is a sheet of a portrait session, which is the same (unnamed) face over and over again, of enduring value?

Now for the flip side.
I understand that he was a photography professor, and we are keeping a lot of his “Photo Tech” teaching slides and images (which I also don’t see as having “enduring value,” but it makes more sense to me).  I’ve asked for more information on the creator, and the collections we already have, but I was met with the answer that this was just “an initial appraisal,” even after explaining that the “initial” part was completed.  Finding aids for his other collections have not been digitized and the information that I found said “see the Visual materials archivist,” which is whom I had asked in the first place.

And its not that one sheet of negatives is going to make the archive explode due to being over capacity, but he was also trying to unsleeve individual slides to put them where he thought they should go, without looking at the titles on the sleeves, which indicated they were part of a group from a carousel. It disturbed more that he was going to such lengths to keep individual items that he would be removing them form the original order.

At this point, I feel like I’ve getting highly conflicting information, from my practicum and this practical work.

And just for an ironic laugh, here is my horoscope for today:
You may have a very sharp sense of what’s right and wrong at work today. You make an excellent judge because your sense of justice is strong now, combined with an ability to see both sides of a question. Just remember that your word isn’t the final say, so only offer it up as your opinion. Give everyone else the time they need to draw their own conclusions.

A Lesson in Appraisal

Monday, September 29th, 2008

I got to work with the Visual Materials curator today while we did a first round of appraisal on a large quantity of slides.  I feel as if even he wasn’t sure how to go about doing this because the instructions I was getting seemed to change as we worked on them.

At first, I thought we were just sorting them into categories.
Then I learned that we were hoping to collect his work relating to agriculture during his travels.
And after a bit more, I was getting confused. I mentioned that we would have to make a second look at some of the slides that had already been sorted into categories and he was against that.  There had been family vacations in Germany that I had put in the Europe pile, but since they didn’t relate to the agriculture that we were hoping to obtain, the should really go into the pile to be returned to the family.

I feel that certain questions need to be answered before we continue much farther;
What are we hoping to document with the materials we’ve received?
Do we also want to keep his photography of flowers that he did for pleasure?
Would it be wiser to send this collection to the University Archives, where they already have some of his materials?

The curator seemed to want to keep everything.  This professor also taught some photography and a lot of the teaching slides were there, including duplicates to show different effects with the camera.  Do we also want to keep these?  My answer was no, there are no notes or markings on the slides and it is the same picture over and over again, without the context, it is useless.  He somehow wanted to keep it.

I think the curator and I have very different appraisal views and we were both becoming a bit defensive.  But after sorting through slides for 3 hours, our backs get sore and lunch approaching, who wouldn’t be getting just a little antsy?

Maryland Library’s Most Wanted: Using the power of the people for increased description

Tuesday, August 19th, 2008

An idea put into action by the Enoch Pratt Free Public Library in Baltimore, MD. I was fortunate enough to attend a SAA Photographs in Archives workshop in Baltimore where an employee of the Enoch Free Library also attended. The idea is that community members may be able to identify photographs that library staff cannot.

Photos are posted online with general descriptions, but asks for specifics. When? Where? Perhaps even who? These could possibly be answered by the general public who grew up in the areas of Maryland that the collection covers.

So far, the project has successfully identified 16 images since it went live and is hosted by the Maryland Digital Cultural Heritage.

See also: Enoch Pratt Free Library homepage

Maine Memory Network: Online Museum/ Consortium

Monday, August 18th, 2008

From the site:

The Maine Memory Network is a statewide digital museum that provides unprecedented access to over 13,000 historical items from over 180 museums, historical societies, libraries, and other organizations from every corner of Maine.

Step inside to see rare photographs, documents and artifacts; to explore online exhibits; to access resources for teaching Maine history; and to learn about how you can participate and help preserve Maine history.

Last week, I was asked to search ARC to see what I could find on our holdings that could be posted on Maine Memory.   I had heard of MMN before, but hadn’t yet broswed it.  NARA-Waltham only has about 10 images that have been contributed, and it was suggested that we contribute a few more.

Using ARC’s Advanced Search option, I toggled the results to include only records of Type: Archetectual and Engineering Drawings, Maps and Charts, and Photographic and other Graphic Material.  Location: NARA-Waltham.  In the search box I typed in”Maine.”  Apparently we only one collection that fits this criteria.

I choose the box from this series that seemed to conatin the oldest material.  I was looking at ARC ID 576544 from Record Group 77 (Records of the Office of the Chief of Engineers, 1789 - 1988 ), Construction Project Photographs, compiled 1927 - 1981, documenting the period 1903 - 1981.

I searched through all the photos in the box, looking for the ones that were visually interesting and that told a story.  This particular box dealt with the construction of Limestone Army Air Base in the late 1940s.  Since the records were photos taken from a photo album, I wasn’t 100% sure if this location was even in Maine.  I did some digging on the internet and found some interesting tidbits of information.

1) Names change and don’t alway refer to the previous or orginal name.  Through a forum post, I learned that ”Limestone Army Air Base” was renamed “Loring Air Force Base”

2) Wikipedia isn’t always completely correct.  I feel slightly inclined to do more research on the beginnings of the LAFB and correct/add to the Wikipedia entry.

The two photos that I choose to post mostly deal with trains in the area.
The first photo is a train fitted with a plow and is plowing snow off the tracks.
The second is a beautiful one of the platform and tracks leading up to the station with a sign that says “Limestone.”

I submitted these photos last Thursday and they have not yet been looked over/approved by MMN.

Lindner Photographs

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

Today I got to start working on a collection I haven’t seen before, the Lindner photographs. The extent of the collection is only one folder, but there are some fantastic photographs.

Adams County Courthouse, circa 1907

This one got my attention as soon as I saw it. I asked some of my co-workers if it was the Wisconsin Historical Society. The consensus was, No, it wasn’t. This building wasn’t long enough and after some further inspection, I saw that there were no lions.


Entrance to the Wisconsin Historical Society, Madison, WI

I do wish that I had taken better photographs of the building when I was on a picture taking spree last fall. I will get another chance once I get a new camera (my current one, for most purposes, is defunct). But I digress. This is the entrance to the Historical Society that have remained unchanged since it was opened to the public in 1900. I have heard through a colleague that the architects who designed the WHS were from the Milwaukee area, where Lindner is also from, and build many buildings, even as far away as California (and in the early 1900s, that was an impressive feat). They have similar styles and designs, which is why, at first glance, I thought the Adams Co. Courthouse was the WHS. But it is not.

More of Lindner’s photographs can be seen at the Wisconsin Historical Images portal here.

WI State Historical Society Work Study Job

Wednesday, February 13th, 2008

Wisconsin Historical Society
Although I intended to post just about my archive practicum, but it is becoming increasingly more difficult to separate what I’m doing for the practicum and what I do as David’s work-study student. Working as his “minion,” I’m learning a lot more by viewing and handling multiple photo collections–with instructions– that I would with just staring at my MTN. (And I should really starting writing that Appraisal and Processing Report. . .) While working on these other collections, I find that I have questions that I would never have thought of:
Will I be re-sleeving all my negatives? (Still in the “it depends” stage.)
Will I be matching picture to negative? (I’ve found the answer to this question is NO, thank God, my collection is not projected to have a heavy usage. They can be matched and numbered later, if necessary.)
Will they be housed in text archival sized boxes or photo boxes? (I haven’t asked this yet, but its one that I’ve been thinking about. My guess is that they will be foldered in 8.5×11 folders and put into 0.4 cu. ft. archival boxes.)

When I first started and he named off some of the collections we’d be working on, I was doing my best to keep quiet. But I was totally geeking out. As a photo minor, hearing about H. H. Bennett’s ahead-of-his-time techniques and being familiar with his Midwest iconic images, I never dreamed that I’d actually be handling the original stereographs one day. Its like meeting a celebrity. Object. A celebrity object. Yes. When I came across the Rafting series, I knew what images I wanted to (and did!) find. The rafter throwing the rope. The flat cook’s raft. They were both there, along with 20 or 30 others. Not to mention, the most famous, the person jumping from rock to rock.

I’m not an avid fan of many music bands or singers–the fandom attitude I don’t get. But there are a few times where I feel I can understand it. Seriously, I am a nerd. I got the same swoon-y feeling when I went to see Lois Lowry speak about her book The Giver and was standing near her to have her sign my book. ::rolls eyes at nerdy self::

Anyways, since I’ve been David’s minion, these are the collections that I have had the privilege of helping him work on:
H. H. Bennett Inventoried, point-numbered, and created container list for 2 boxes of stereographs.
Keck & Keck Foldered, labeled, alphabetized, created container list, and rehoused approximately 300 mounted photos and architectural drawings. This includes photos of The Crystal House and The House of Tomorrow, projects for the Chicago’s World Fair. NOTE: The links were found via Google Images and do not to any justice to the originals. The photographers for Keck & Keck were phenomenal, there were multiple photographers, and all were very high quality.
Greendale photos Matching photos with negatives, determining what is missing, correcting container list.(Current project)

More on archives later. It is time for bed.