97 lines
5.6 KiB
Plaintext
97 lines
5.6 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 4259
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Title: HPR4259: Why digitize photos
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4259/hpr4259.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 22:09:27
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4259 for Thursday, the 28th of November 2024.
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Today's show is entitled, Why Digitize Photos.
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It is hosted by Henry Cameron and is about seven minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, two reasons to digitize photos is discussed, for a historical archive
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or for a personal collection.
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Welcome to Hacker Public Radio.
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My name is Henley Cameron and I'm your host today.
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In Hacker Public Radio Episode 4244, I briefly discussed two methods of digitizing analog
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photos.
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With a scanner and a repro photo with a digital camera.
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Today I want to talk about why digitizing analog photos.
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It may appear to be a stupid question.
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We'll see what you think in a couple of minutes.
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Three years ago, I wrote a chapter in the annual book for a Home Village Association.
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The chapter was about life in a small village in the 1930s.
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In addition to the text, I had a couple of black and white photos from those days.
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I said black and white, but honestly, an 80 year old black and white print is not only
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black and white because of aging, type of paper and development method, the black and
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white print has colors.
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Should the photos in the book chapter be of best black and white photo quality, or should
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they reflect the prints as they are at the time of the book release?
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There is no right or wrong answer into that question, but it relates to the topic why digitize.
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I have found the website preserving history, how to digitally archive and share historical
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photographs, documents and audio recordings.
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According to the websites are in the show notes.
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The main focus for that website is photograph graphs, but as the title states, it's also
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about documents and audio.
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The website is written and organized as a book and is very comprehensive and a useful resource.
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It is a few years old, but is still to a large extent accurate and relevant.
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The exact details which equipment formats, settings and so on can be discussed, and
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as technology has evolved, what the book describes as the best practice may now have become
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more mainstream good practice.
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The book has a chapter titled Historical Archive vs Personal Photographic Collection.
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The historical archive is about to preserve the object in every detail.
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It is applicable for two archives, like museums and other more official public archives.
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It means if you take my old black and white prints from 1930s that they should be digitizing
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in color and include the full prints with borders.
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It also means I should somehow store its dimensions, so that's known afterwards.
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From a historical digital archive copy, it's possible to make a copy that is of good photo
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quality also.
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The other reason to digitize is of personal and family reasons.
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In this scope the focus is to have good photos.
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It means the original size, borders, scratches, faded colors and so on are not really important
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to preserve.
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This approach gives better flexibility in method, equipment and settings, and in general
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the work will probably be less time consuming.
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The drawback is that it is not possible to make an historical archive copy from this
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digital copy.
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My purpose for digitizing is primarily the personal collection, but still in some cases
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I feel I want to do something in between the personal archive and a true digital historical
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archive copy, maybe mostly when it comes to preserve colors from prints.
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So the takeaway from this episode is that I recommend you to give the purpose of why
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you digitize photos, a thought before you start a big digitizing project.
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And that you need to balance any desire to make the best possible archive value copy
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with the best possible equipment and all time in the world with what is realistic for
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you and what is good enough.
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And at the other end the happiness to have and share a digital photocopy of any quality
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is better than none at all, but considering a bit more of work and attention may improve
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the quality significantly.
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Finally before I end this episode I also want to give a few remarks to my own episode
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number 4244, where I talk about placing the negative or positive in direct contact to
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glass under or above it.
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There is a risk that this will create Newton rings which can affect the result in a not acceptable
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way, so be observant if this will be an issue or not.
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The problem that the object is not totally flat in a flatbed scanner should in most cases
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not be a problem.
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The scanners are normally designed to manage a bit of focus depth, so a bending negative
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will probably be fine.
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And also some remarks on my repro setup.
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My digital camera is mounted on a repro stand.
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The stand is similar to the stand used in an analog photo dock room.
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The duplication direction is opposite to the one in the analog dock room.
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The camera is mounted on the stand while the object to be duplicated is placed on the
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base plate.
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I have a light table on the base plate when a negative or positive is duplicated so
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the light can shine through the negative or positive.
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Mounted on the camera, depending on lens, may an extension tube be needed to achieve
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the macro distance to duplicate a small object.
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Thank you for listening.
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Take care and goodbye.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org.
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Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contribute link to find out
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how easy it leads.
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Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the internet archive and
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our sync.net.
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On this advice status, today's show is released on our Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
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International License.
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