Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/08/16
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Like many here whos experiences I have read over the past couple of = days, I too lost 25 years worth of images, everything from age 15 to age = 40, pro and personal. In my case it was to a flood, not a fire, but the = results are the same. The few exceptions were those images which had appeared in books and = magazines which survived. A handful of prints were also in private = collections but everything else was lost. Since then, and after a haitus of some years when I left photography = completely in dispair, I have been rigerous in filing, storing and = safeguarding my transparencies and negatives. For the past year or so, since I became involved in digital darkroom = work, I have been scanning all of my best work from the past 10 years or = so and storing the files on CD ROM. These have a claimed life = expectancy of many decades (Kodak claims 200 years for their CDs) and = this makes me a lot more confident that my images will be accessable to = me and others in years to come. It also helps avoid the inevitable = fading of color materials. 35mm slides are typically 20MB in size and 120 film (depending on aspect = ratio) 30-45MB. Even with these large files, a CD ROM blank is only $6 = or $7 and holds 650MB, so cost isn't a serious issue. Raw scans, = unmanipulated in Photoshop, only take a few minutes each so time isn't a = big issue either. Good scanners are expensive though. I have a Nikon = LS-1000 for 35mm and an Agfa Duoscan for medium and large format and = they both produce excellent results. Michael