Regarding archiving... I don't wish to open the can of worms up fully, but there is a good question as to if digital is a better method of archiving than film.
Current film dyes are quite stable, especially if care is taken during processing with archiving in mind. After that, keep the film in an acid-free, dark, low humidity and cool temperature, away from abnormal gases (ozone, CO, hydrocarbons) will keep the film safe for many years to come. No standard currently available digital storage system is truly archival. Not MO, not PD, and certainly not CDR. They all are damaged by some environmental influence. CDR uses dyes, not so dissimilar to film. Further, small damage can make a file completely useless, and also, file types change and storage media changes every two weeks. Try finding a drive to read a 8" floppy or a 10 meg 12" Bernoulli disk. Heck, it's hard to find a Syquest 44 drive these days, and that was a "standard". Actually, one of the best methods of storage is using true black and white (silver based) color separations. But this requires 3 frames of black and white per image and someone good at recreating color from B&W color separations. Art John Prokos wrote: > Charles, > > The problem with that approach right now is that they want to archive the > images, and the dyes in color negative film are relatively unstable. A > digital file is good for a lot longer - as long as it is stored on good > media like MO disks or high quality CDR. Thank you for your suggestion. > > Regards, > > John > > > on 02/05/02 5:01 PM, Charles Stirling at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > >>** Reply to note from [EMAIL PROTECTED] Tue, 05 Feb 2002 00:22:04 >>-0800 >> >> >>>I have taken on a project to scan 50 old lantern slides from a Mt >>>McKinley expedition in 1910. This is a not for profit organization I am >>>going to be working for and they don't have ton's of cash to spend on >>>a scanner. >>> >>What about a rather old fashioned approch. Photograph the lantern >>slides say onto a fine grain 35mm film and scan the 35mm. >> >> >> >>Charles Stirling >> ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Unsubscribe by mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED], with 'unsubscribe filmscanners' or 'unsubscribe filmscanners_digest' (as appropriate) in the message title or body
