x-ray
Veteran
Sixteen years ago I moved my studio from a 6,000 sq ft space with a huge darkroom to my home. Sixteen years ago wasn't the peak of my film shooting but over 32 years of shooting as a professional and another 8 years as a young amateur I wound up with a massive number of negatives. I would estimate the file cabinets and boxes of negatives represented about 200,000 B&W negatives from 35mm to 11x14 not to mention the huge number of rolls and sheets of transparencies. Most of this was from assignments and most were advertising related. In the ad world the life of any image is short. It might be used for a year or only one ad.
What to do with all this film. Well, I decided to toss thousands of negatives. A number of clients didn't even exist anymore and most of the images were very dated and hadn't been used for years. I contacted my clients to see if they wanted the film and only one responded. The next step was to dispose if them. One afternoon I started hauling thousands of negatives to the dumpster. There was a sad moment because there were some really good shots and many of the projects war done for some excellent art directors that I really enjoyed working with. This mass of negatives represented a major period of my professional life.
Now I'm moving again. I'm moving to larger quarters and faced with disposing of thousands of DC's and DVD's full of images from the digital phase of my life. With digital it's not as easy as looking at a sheet of negs and tossing it in a trash can. All of my discs are labeled by client, some job info and date. The problem is I'd like to keep some of the images for future promotion of my work. Unfortunately this involves looking at hundreds of discs on my computer and putting individual files on a separate hard drive to archive. What a pain.
The next think I had to do is pack my documentary work. I'd never throw these away. They represent the best phase of my work and are mostly historic and can never be recreated. All of my negs from 35mm to 8x10 are 99.9% B&W and are all in archival pages and most in VueAll archival binders. I'm guessing there are well over 100,000 negatives. Everything you see in the pho are boxes of documentary negatives. Behind the boxes is another large container of documentary work too.
Because these are precious to me and are willed to the historical society museum upon my parting this earth I'm transporting them to my new digs myself.
My question, how many shots have you made in your lifetime on film only? How do you preserve them? What are your future plans for them?
I think back to Brett Weston who burned his negatives on his 81st (check birthday) birthday. I simply could not do that nor even if I knew they would fall into my ex-wifes hands which they're not.
What to do with all this film. Well, I decided to toss thousands of negatives. A number of clients didn't even exist anymore and most of the images were very dated and hadn't been used for years. I contacted my clients to see if they wanted the film and only one responded. The next step was to dispose if them. One afternoon I started hauling thousands of negatives to the dumpster. There was a sad moment because there were some really good shots and many of the projects war done for some excellent art directors that I really enjoyed working with. This mass of negatives represented a major period of my professional life.
Now I'm moving again. I'm moving to larger quarters and faced with disposing of thousands of DC's and DVD's full of images from the digital phase of my life. With digital it's not as easy as looking at a sheet of negs and tossing it in a trash can. All of my discs are labeled by client, some job info and date. The problem is I'd like to keep some of the images for future promotion of my work. Unfortunately this involves looking at hundreds of discs on my computer and putting individual files on a separate hard drive to archive. What a pain.
The next think I had to do is pack my documentary work. I'd never throw these away. They represent the best phase of my work and are mostly historic and can never be recreated. All of my negs from 35mm to 8x10 are 99.9% B&W and are all in archival pages and most in VueAll archival binders. I'm guessing there are well over 100,000 negatives. Everything you see in the pho are boxes of documentary negatives. Behind the boxes is another large container of documentary work too.
Because these are precious to me and are willed to the historical society museum upon my parting this earth I'm transporting them to my new digs myself.
My question, how many shots have you made in your lifetime on film only? How do you preserve them? What are your future plans for them?
I think back to Brett Weston who burned his negatives on his 81st (check birthday) birthday. I simply could not do that nor even if I knew they would fall into my ex-wifes hands which they're not.