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Published byTyler Dunlap Modified over 11 years ago
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How Bad is Good Enough? Mass Digitization of Photographic Archives James Eason The Bancroft Library University of California at Berkeley
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My Context
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Is mass digitization an answer?
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Photographs: Considerations for Scanning Strategies Perceived value(s) Preservation needs Reproduction is key to use Description: more detail justified? Concept of archival evidence
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Digitization of Photos Do it once, do it right? or Just do it?
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Low-Cost Approach Scan everything (no selection) Minimal keying of existing sleeve data Batch processing No image adjustment No quality control review! Batch validation (automated scripts)
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Cost/Quality Compromise 800 ppi resolution (for 4 x 5 in.) 16 bit grayscale (not 8 bit)
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Low-Cost Approach Results 21,000 negatives scanned $1.50 to $3.00 per image
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Case Study The San Francisco Examiner Newspaper Photograph Archive at The Bancroft Library, U.C. Berkeley
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San Francisco Examiner News Archive Over 3.5 million negatives 70,000 of these are nitrate film (4x5 in.) 1.5 million or more are acetate
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Priorities Preservation (triage & storage environment) Access Long term preservation plan (with support from NEH)
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What is Doing it Right??? Preservation reformatting is ill- defined in the digital age
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Mass Digitization as a Tool Access Curatorial assessment & appraisal Preservation? –Assessment –Preserve context
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Two Work-flows Tested Vendor List sleeves Ship off-site Raw scans + basic metadata returned Batch validation Batch derivatives Load to server Students List sleeves & items Scan in office Raw scans, key data while scanning Batch validation Batch derivatives Load to server
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What did we get for our effort? (Or, How bad is good enough?)
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Is that all? (No, actually): –Serviceable production masters –Curatorial review tool –Strategic preservation strategy Context & archival evidence (all) Selected images (very few)
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Preservation Strategy What will we preserve? Full aesthetic value? Context and basic information? Select for Preservation Reformatting 5 % ? 2 % ? Recorded archival context of the whole Consider film-from-digital for entirety of nitrate files
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Reiterate Comparison of Scan Approaches High res (1200 ppi +) High bit depth Huge file sizes Manually adjusted Quality control $12-$18 / image High-ish res (800 ppi) High bit depth (16 bit) Large-ish files (22 MB) Batch processed Batch validation $1.50-$3 / image
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Whats Next? User interface –Assess impact More funding to continue Further assessment of film output approaches
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Appendix User interface examples
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