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Build a Family Photo Archive

By Maureen A. Taylor

I'm not a New Year's resolution type of person, but this Jan. 1, I decided to change that. It's been a long 12 months filled with family events, some happy, some not. So instead of trying to add another generation to my pedigree chart this year, I'm going to focus on finding pictures of all my relatives to create a family photo archive. You can do the same thing by following these steps. Tell your own stories, make suggestions or questions in the Family Tree Magazine Photo Detective Forum. I'll use the Forum to share my success or failures.

Gather Your Tools
Prices on laptop computers and scanners are becoming very affordable. I've purchased a laptop with lots of memory and a scanner with a letter-size bed that fits into a small suitcase. It's perfect for taking along on family visits to copy photographs. You could use a digital camera and a tripod, but I've had better luck scanning. Asking family and friends what they use and check out equipment reviews on Epinions.

Contact Family
My aunts and uncles have passed on, so I've chatted with cousins about heirlooms and family stories, and I've dropped hints about their photos. Now it's time to get serious. I'm going to call them and tell them about my endeavor. Hopefully, they'll be excited about it and want to participate. A cousin said recently, "I only see you at funerals." That's got to change.

Collect Images
With my laptop and scanner in tow, I plan to visit each person on my list and scan his or her photos. I use Picasa (a free download from Google) to organize my images, but any photo software will do the job. On a printout of my family tree, I'll highlight each person contacted in one color, and annotate the tree to show who I've acquired pictures of. For me, an important part of this task is getting relatives to sign a release form that allows me to use their pictures in publications. To use professional photos that are still under copyright, I'll have to obtain permission from the original photographer. For information on copyright, see Sharon DeBartolo Carmack's December 2004 Family Tree Magazine article.

Scanning Advice
Save each image as a high-resolution (at least 300 dpi) file in TIF format for preservation and printing purposes. For help scanning, consult Rhonda McClure's Digitizing Your Family History (Family Tree Books, $19.99). Each digital file should identify the person in the photo, a date (if known), who owns the original and any other information related to the picture. You can use a paper system such as the index sheets in Uncovering Your Ancestry Through Family Photographs, 2nd. edition (Family Tree Books, $24.99), incorporate the details and photos into your family history software, or use your computer's file information feature (highlight the file, then look under the File menu).

Share the Images
Options for sharing photos range from printing copies to posting them on the web. I'll produce CDs of each cousin's collection and later create a photo book for myself using a Web site such as PhotoWorks.com.

Print the Pics
One thing is for sure. The images won't just stay on my computer. I loke looking at photographs in hand more than on a screen. Printing family pictures is a cinch with a photo printer such as the ones from Epson, Hewlett-Packard or Canon. Look for one that uses preservation-quality inks and papers.

This may take a lot longer than a year, but it's a resolution I intend to keep. I'm sure my cousins will have great stories to tell, and might even have family history artifacts and papers they've overlooked. These discoveries could solve some of the problems on my pedigree chart. It's going to be a fun 12 months of looking at family pictures.




Maureen A. Taylor, owner of Taylor & Strong, combines her background in history, genealogy, photography and library science to assist individuals and institutions with research and project management. She writes the Photo Detective column for Family Tree Magazine and is the author of Uncovering Your Ancestry through Family Photographs, 2nd edition, Preserving Your Family Photographs and Scrapbooking Your Family History. Visit her family history and photography Web site and blog, www.PhotoDetective.com.

Her book Preserving Your Family Photographs shows you how to organize and store your most cherished images, so future generations can enjoy them. You'll learn how to care for family photos, identify different types of damage, use basic conservation techniques, buy proper storage materials and then organize your family photo archive and safely display it for all to see.
 
 

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