MelanieC
Well-known
My husband and I were given some very old 35mm negatives (1920s, 1930s) and some glass plate negatives (same vintage, I think) to arrange and digitize. Some of the 35mm negatives are already cut up -- into separate frames, for some reason, not strips -- and stored in paper envelopes. But most of them are rolled up tightly in film canisters, and presumably have been that way for decades. The glass negatives are in paper envelopes.
Some preliminary research suggests that we will be able to unroll the rolled negatives by soaking them in water (distilled, I suppose) with a little bit of Photoflo. These are family artifacts but also have broader historical significance, and it is very important that they not be damaged. I am perfectly happy to hand them over to a professional archivist, but was wondering if it would be necessary.
Any advice would be welcome.
Some preliminary research suggests that we will be able to unroll the rolled negatives by soaking them in water (distilled, I suppose) with a little bit of Photoflo. These are family artifacts but also have broader historical significance, and it is very important that they not be damaged. I am perfectly happy to hand them over to a professional archivist, but was wondering if it would be necessary.
Any advice would be welcome.