Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2003/06/21
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]My father-in-law who passed away earlier this year was a professional photographer in Kota Kinabalu, Malaysia (Island of Borneo) for his working life. He has left behind thousands of B&W negatives (35mm and 2 1/4) of the era between 1940 to about 1980. A portion of these negatives are of the aboriginal tribes of Borneo in their original dress and cultural setting (including headhunters - really! :-) which has for the most part being abandoned - they now wear T-shirts and jeans. Now I don't think they are of any real monetary value but they may be of value to museums or archives as cultural records. One of these days I will contact the museums in Ottawa to see if anyone would be interested in acquiring or maintaining the collection. So, BD, would the digital images being shot today by a local photographer in Papua New Guinea be viewable by anyone in 2043? Did my father-in-law expect that these photographs would likely be his most important photographic legacy? Of course not. He certainly did not make any significant money on these images. He made his living photographing studio portraits, school graduations, official events like most photographers. The tough part for most people is trying to figure out 40 years ahead of time which images willl be of value to the future. To keep this on topic, I inherited his used Leica and Hassebald bits to add to my own few Leica and Canon bits with which I hope to make some images that someone one day would find interesting and worth keeping. Of course, if digital photography ever becomes standardized enough to be considered archival, I certainly would consider using it. Regards Spencer >>>>> "bdcolen" == bdcolen <bdcolen@earthlink.net> writes: bdcolen> Uh, hello? All of this discussion of archival media is bdcolen> fascinating, but would anyone on this list of hobbyists bdcolen> and working pros care to tell us what loss it would be to bdcolen> the world if some of our images faded a bit or just plain bdcolen> disappeared? I'd certainly love to be discovered after my bdcolen> death like a Disfarmer, but somehow I doubt that's in the bdcolen> cards. ;-) - -- To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html