Bill Pierce
Well-known
What do you do with your pictures, your personal pictures? Your professional pictures will be archived to some extent by the people who paid for them and may well continue to have a long life after they were taken. But what about the pictures you took for yourself, be they family snaps or great art?
Since it’s pretty easy to pass great art on to museums, especially if you don’t charge for it, our primary concern is family snaps. I’ve mentioned before that I inherited many of my family’s photo albums, fairly large collections of relatively small drug store prints. They are a loving collection of memories, but limited by the quality and size of the prints. Rather than albums, the family snaps I take are larger loose prints that fill archival portfolio boxes, 8x10 and 8 1/2 x 11. Like an album, you can put them in your lap or on a desk or table and browse. But, for me, that bigger and hopefully better print stirs stronger memories, stronger feelings. Hopefully it does that for the other folks who see them.
Why not images on a computer screen? I think on the family snapshot level emailing a few jpgs is wonderful. I think sitting someone down with a box of prints is more powerful. But, more important, a box of prints looks like a box of prints. An auxiliary hard disc looks like a metal box with input and output sockets. When it’s time for the next generation to inherit the family snaps, there’s a real chance the metal box will not be recognized for what it is and get dumped. And, if it doesn’t, remember the magnetic signal on that disc will decay considerably faster than well made prints in a box.
So - what are you doing, what do you plan to do with your family snaps?
Since it’s pretty easy to pass great art on to museums, especially if you don’t charge for it, our primary concern is family snaps. I’ve mentioned before that I inherited many of my family’s photo albums, fairly large collections of relatively small drug store prints. They are a loving collection of memories, but limited by the quality and size of the prints. Rather than albums, the family snaps I take are larger loose prints that fill archival portfolio boxes, 8x10 and 8 1/2 x 11. Like an album, you can put them in your lap or on a desk or table and browse. But, for me, that bigger and hopefully better print stirs stronger memories, stronger feelings. Hopefully it does that for the other folks who see them.
Why not images on a computer screen? I think on the family snapshot level emailing a few jpgs is wonderful. I think sitting someone down with a box of prints is more powerful. But, more important, a box of prints looks like a box of prints. An auxiliary hard disc looks like a metal box with input and output sockets. When it’s time for the next generation to inherit the family snaps, there’s a real chance the metal box will not be recognized for what it is and get dumped. And, if it doesn’t, remember the magnetic signal on that disc will decay considerably faster than well made prints in a box.
So - what are you doing, what do you plan to do with your family snaps?