Showing posts with label photo organization. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photo organization. Show all posts

Sunday, March 3, 2019

Travel Break: People Ask...

Sometimes people ask me questions in the blog comments and I try to reply to them personally. (I try to reply personally when you comment, question or not!)

But many readers are "no-reply" bloggers, which means no email address. Others don't have a blog where I can go back and at least comment there. So, I don't know how to get an answer to them.

I've been collecting a few of these questions here, so I hope the questioners are reading!

What Kind of Scanner Do You Use?

In my post about organizing photos, I mentioned I was scanning lots of the old photos. I have a very good scanner, though it's getting a little old now. I've really put it through its paces, with hundreds of scans. It is a HP Scanjet  G4010. (There may be a new model number by now; mine is several years old.


 It's scanning bed can handle four 4x6 photos at a time or a typical document page and also has a way for scanning slides (that's that strip in the middle of the lid, below), which I've done but not often. So far, so good!


When you have Cork Poppers, do you follow a theme or does everyone just bring something?

It all depends! At our most recent Poppers, the theme was "Wines You  Would Enjoy After a Stroll." So, people brought a wide variety -- domestic, Spanish, Italian. But sometimes we will have a theme such as Wines of Northern Italy, Wines of France, Wines of South America.


Other times it may be "Wines in the Key of C" (Chablis, Cabernet, etc.) or Wines for a Summer Afternoon. The host picks the theme. Or, it may be a category (Nothing Boring About Bordeaux.)


You can find a post on how we plan a Cork Poppers event HERE and other ideas at the Cork Poppers tab on the menu bar or HERE. This is just how our group rolls but there are a million ways to do it and I hope you do!


What Kind of a Camera Do You Use?

I used to have big cameras. I don't have the life anymore. I want a real camera (not a phone camera) and I want it to fit in my purse or pocket. My current camera is a Canon SX730HS, with a 40x optical zoom (which means it can zoom to 160x). It was the next model after my SX710 with a 30x zoom.

What do I like? It's small and reasonably lightweight. It has various settings, including some goofy ones but many I like. It records relatively decent movies (the problems are generally operator error!) I love a zoom that can get reasonable shots from very far away. Like Harry the Heron.


What don't I like? The focus seems a little softer than the earlier model, though some of that (probably more than some) can be operator error. It can be shaky when the zoom is out. To be honest, I don't know that it gets movement as well as the earlier model. I look at some of the pix on the blog, especially long distance shots with no or minimal zoom and I see them as softer focus than the earlier model. Same with some of the more close-up photos. If you are zooming on a windy day, good luck. You have to hold relatively still and when I'm shooting casually, I don't always.

Verdict? When I replace it, I will look at other models and brands. I won't rule out another Canon, but I'll also look at other zoom models.

What do you do with the wine bottles after Cork Poppers? Do you have a bottle tree?

To be honest, most get pitched. I might save a couple of good ones for fun vases for a theme table, but by and large, they go. I SHOULD do a bottle tree. Thanks for the idea!


Why Does Your Email Say Jean but your blog is Jeanie? Which do you prefer?

Call me Jeanie. Please. My email program is through the university and it won't let me change my name! I've gone through all the hoops and could probably call HR but it's close enough!

Do You Keep a Journal While You Are Traveling?

I do, at least for longer trips. Even on short ones I'll keep bullet notes. I pick something light and fairly flexible. (I've done hard bound journals before but it's extra weight and I pack smarter now!). The one below is what I took on the England/Paris trip. It was from Michael's in a packet of two for about $5 or so (I bought them a long time ago.) It had about 60 pages and they were thick enough to take a micron pen (I took three with me). I figured I could write up to two full pages a day and I did pretty much that.


I also filled in with drawings every day -- even if it was just a banner or quick sketch. When I got home I added printouts of some favorite photos and in the back added some memorabilia with a binder clip.


It's helped me tremendously as I've posted, since specifics fade in time! I also enjoyed looking over my first England journal (1973) and my last Paris journal (2012). They're good reminders of who I was and am and things and places I loved.


Where Does One Go to Get Slides and Photos Digitized?

I suspect that depends on where you are and what local resource are available. I'm not sure what we have here but I figured I would use a scanner enough to make it worthwhile to have my own and have a slide/negative function on it.

Otherwise, just google "transfer slides photos to digital, your city state" When I do this for my city I get several camera stores and other sites that offer this service. Check with your volume desired for transfer and their costs versus a scanner that would allow you to do it yourself. (It does take time so factor that in. (Note: Blogger Marilyn said she has had very good experiences with Costco scanning slides at a very reasonable price. Check it out in your area.) 

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Friday, February 22, 2019

Making Friends with Your Old Photos

I'm wondering if you might not be like me -- you have boxes of photos representing decades of a life. Or, more likely, many lives.


They may be ones you took yourself, photos taken by parents of you and your siblings or their life before they met or even those taken by grandparents. Some are in albums, others scattered.

And you look at them and might have these thoughts:

Who are those people anyway?
What in the world am I going to do with them?

It can feel a little overwhelming -- and a little scary, so one step at a time!


As anyone who has tried to pull together photos for a picture board at a graduation, funeral or milestone birthday knows, it's tough to do it when you are under pressure. And these days, often a video is the preferred form of viewing and how in the world do you make that happen with this odd collection of paper memories.

I have those boxes and photo albums (my own and my parents), along with literally thousands of photos on my computer and external storage devices and I've wrestled with that issue -- trying to get them in some rightful order and to get the photos to those who might really care about them after.

Here are my tips -- feel free to add some of your own in the comments.

Rule Number One! Identify people. You may know who these folks are but as I've been doing my family history I've encountered a lot of anonymous faces that show up often. They must have been important to someone but I have no idea who they are! (Below, I can pick out four people in this group.)


A pencil marking on the back of hard copy (or a thin sharpie or specially designated photo markers) are fine. Just something to tell future generations if those are people they should care about or their great grandmother's next door neighbor's grandson playing with the family dog.

Two: Get them digitied. For the golden oldies -- two options.

The one I don't like is to take your camera or phone and photograph the piece. Sometimes this works. But you need a good camera and you need to be sure the photo is flat (lots aren't). And you if you are shooting an entire scrapbook page, you need to know how to crop. Not hard, but not the best method.

I prefer getting a scanner. A good scanner that can also do slides. The default for many scanners is 200 dpi and this is fine for most uses -- certainly the computer or smaller prints. If you are planning on making a printed book or bigger enlargement, go to the 300 resolution setting for the best outcome.


Rule Three: As technology changes, transfer the media while you can. Trust me -- if you look at a pile of old floppies you can't open containing old photos you'll cry. Everything changes. Transportation. Communication. Technology.


Think of the betamax, eight track and records. OK, I know vinyl is coming back, but the principal is the same.

One other tip. If you are going through the mechanics of doing all this, consider color correcting or brightening up the faded colors while you're at it. Your gray snow will look whiter, you may even pick up details on the photo that had faded. Many scanners have this feature. If you are looking at your regular photos, consider a program like Picassa where you can edit by color/brightness modification and crop. Some of these basic programs are free.


What's Next -- Or, How do I Find It?

So, you scan (and scan and scan). And now you have all these photos on your computer. On top of the ones from your digital camera you've already put in there. And you still can't find anything.

Everyone will have a different system but mine works pretty well. Here's how I do it, bearing in mind that I use a camera, not a phone. (The same principle would apply to phone or tablet shots, once they are downloaded.)
.
Here you can see some of the folders I use when I initially subdivide.

  • For new photos, as I download them, I name a file with the year, month and then an idea of what's in the file. For example: 2018 June -- Lizzie, Ditch, Lake
  • Then I make a file for all 2018 June and when the month is over (and you could do it before, I just don't) put all the individual files there. And then one for the year -- 2018. When the month is over, I move all the 2018 June to the 2018 file.
  • At the end of the year I have all the photos for one year in one file.
Do a junk edit -- these are things you know you don't want to save to an external.  Photos of book covers done for a reading post? Gone. Six photos of the same smiling group from a birthday party? I delete at least four and keep the best one or two.

Back up your best to an external drive or the cloud.

Then I edit. Again.  I delete things with a vengeance. I do this with everything. This edit will probably be less if you did your work well before the back-up!

And it makes a big difference to your computer. I still have to edit half of 2018 but so far I picked up 34 gigabytes of memory on my computer!

After I have saved the "Best of" on an external drive or flash, I go back through and subdivide. Flowers go into a file called "Flowers."  Family goes into "Family" and then gets subdivided ("Mom Only," "Mom and Dad," "Dad Only." The same for friends by name or group (like "Cork Poppers"). There are Travel US and Travel International and each is subdivided.

The "Family" folder

SO, when I am looking for photos for a blog post or to pull together a Shutterfly book for a friend or family, I know right where to go.

Photos Not Scanned or Otherwise on the Computer

The other ways to save and share photos are online, printed books, videos, old-time photo albums and scrapbooks.

Online: You can save the photos on the cloud. I have a google drive I use for family photos that I can share with the cousins. I also have a Shutterfly share site that has some of Rick's family things. I'm sure there are others; I just don't know them because I don't use them.

Google drive

Shutterfly folders

Printed Books: I use Shutterfly because it is what I started with but I have seen beautiful MacBooks, things from Snapfish, Blurb and other sources. These can get expensive but when they do I think about how much I used to pay for a) film b) developing c) all the bad ones you throw away after you got them back from the processor.

Shutterfly project page

Almost every year I make yearbooks for Rick and me -- an overview of friends, family, trips and such. These we actually look at because we have chosen the best of the pix and don't have to thumb through all the bad ones!


 You can even add text. Or bad poetry.


Videos: There are loads of easy ways to make video slide shows on your computer and share them with youtube.

Traditional Methods:  And sometimes you want to paste things into a book. I do. Maybe it's a beautiful handmade book or journal. If you're doing that, make sure it is a book worthy of your time and that it uses acid free paper as a background.


And if you still have photos in those magnetic page things -- pull out the good ones, dump the bad. Just get them out of there.

And when you are done -- well, if you no longer want those photos, you have a couple of options. I've used both. Toss them. Or, send them off to whomever is in them -- or knows those people -- and let them make the choice to save or toss. Half the time our friends never see all the great pix we took of them in the way-back machine and it's kind of fun to see yourself looking a whole lot better -- or at least younger -- than you are now!

Oh, here's a parting tip. We're all going to die. If you want photos shown at your memorial, choose them now. Make a folder called "funeral" and tell someone where it is and put in all your favorites. They will thank you and that really lousy photo of you in your swimming suit at the family reunion isn't going to show up -- unless you looked better than I did!


OR, make them yourself. When a friend's mom was nearing the end of her life, she began making the photo boards for the memorial so that she wouldn't have to do it in a short period during the grieving time. I have been thinking about making large collaged posters of the ones I would like for that time. I haven't done it yet because it doesn't seem too imminent. But then, we never know. And it would be so nice if Rick didn't have to worry about that.

If you've read along so far, thanks! And if you do anything -- please label!

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