How and where do you store your photographs? Rita Norton and Brina Bolanz asked this question at a recent National Association of Professional Organizers (NAPO) Oregon Chapter meeting. Yes, one of our answers was--shoeboxes--along with photo albums and plastic boxes; storage places mentioned were attics, basements, closets, drawers, and garages.
Rita is a training specialist with the
Association of Personal Photo Organizers
(APPO), and Brina is a photo archivist and personal historian who owns
.
Both organize and showcase photographs (in different ways) for a living; their websites provide greater detail about organizing, storing, and preserving paper and digital photographs for future generations to enjoy.
Rita and Brina shared several tips and a few are listed below to help you get started with your photo preservation project:
Rita Recommends
:
1. Gather all your photographs into one place and sort them into these categories:
Photographs that tell a story and are photo-album worthy
Photographs you want to keep, but not necessarily share
Photographs destined for the trash container as family members are unable to recognize faces and places and because they are unlabeled.
2. Scan your photographs into your computer, then use a free program such as
, an image organizer and viewer, for organizing and editing your digital photographs.
3. Back up your files! Use one of these:
Gold DVDs, purported to last 100-300 years
External hard drive
Cloud storage:
-
advertises: "Access Your Files From Anywhere Anytime, From Any Device"
-
advertises: "Simple. Safe. Secure."
Brina Suggests
:
1. Proper storage is essential to preserve photographs.
Light, temperature extremes, water and humidity, and gases given off by chemicals in household products can cause degradation.
Use only materials that pass the Photographic Activity Test (P. A. T.), administered by American National Standards Institute (ANSI), rather than products labeled "Acid Free," a term not regulated by the Federal government. These products may be purchased from photography stores, or online from:
- Archival Methods:
- Gaylord Brothers:
- Hollinger Metal Edge:
- University Products:
2. Label your photographs because they are not useful without identifying information:
Use a 4B (soft) graphite pencil for all-paper photos and write on a hard, flat surface, preferably glass, to avoid damaging the front of the photograph.
Write names, life dates, location, and event (if known) along the top or bottom edge of the back of the photograph.
Write women's maiden names in parentheses.
Switch from shoebox to computer storage; back up your files and keep a second copy in your safe deposit box to avoid unforeseeable loss of treasured photographs due to damage and destruction by fires and floods. Write down your parent's and family's genealogy information and label old family photographs...before photographs and memories' fade. Once our WWII veterans (our parents for some of us)--and other family members pass, so too do the details of their lives.