A tour around library image projects

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A personal tour around library image projects

Tony PilmerChair, LSG South

Introduction

Images as engagement. Harnessing the crowd. Collecting today’s images. Images for profit. Digitising for preservation. Top tips from image projects.

Images as engagement -Spot the difference

Images as engagement -Spot the difference – 12+

Images as engagement -Spot the difference staff Christmas quiz

Images as engagement -Older images in context

Heritage Open DaysKingston upon

Thames

Images as engagement -Older images in context

Heritage Open DaysKingston upon

Thames

Images as engagement -Older images in context

Solihull Libraries

Images as engagement -Older images in context

Solihull Libraries

Solihull Libraries

Images as engagement -Forgotten photos

Images as engagement getting people talking

Slough Libraries

Images as engagement getting people talking

Slough Libraries

Images as engagement getting people talking

Our Oxhey/ Herts Libraries

Images as engagement getting people talking online p.1

Our Oxhey/ Herts Libraries

Images as engagement getting people talking online p.2

Our Oxhey/ Herts Libraries

Images as engagement getting people talking online p.3

Our Oxhey/ Herts Libraries

Harnessing the crowd – Crowd sourcing

Collecting imagesCollecting known Slough

Slough Libraries

Collecting imagesCollecting the unknown: Secret Slough

Children’s project: Slough Libraries

Collecting imagesCollecting the unknown: Secret Slough

Collecting imagesCollecting the unknown: Surveys

Slough Libraries

Images for profit?

West Sussex Past

Images for profit?

Images for profit?

Images for profit?

Digitising for conservation – 35mm slides

Herts Archive & Local Studies

Digitising for conservation – 35mm slides

Digitisation to highlight your organisation’s heritage

Turn the page books from Institute of Mechanical Engineering

Digitisation to highlight your organisation’s heritage

RUSI Library of Military History

Top tips from library projects – IT

Corporate IT - Enthusiastic IT v unenthusiastic IT. Digital storage. Can volunteers use corporate networks and

computers? Advantages using outside IT systems &

companies. Free v paid for systems – or both? Be very clear on an IT spec from the outset. Test your product – watch users accessing your

project – it can be cheap to make tweaks which make an amazing difference.

Top tips from library projects – IT

History Pin

Top tips from library projects – IT

A good advanced search page.

Top tips from library projects – IT

Use the system you have

Top tips from library projects – IT

A good advanced search page.

Top tips from library projects – Copyright

Donation conditions? Is it published? Risk management.

Top tips from library projects – Copyright

New rules on conservation digitisation.

I am a librarian/archivist/curator, what am I allowed to do now? You can copy works for archiving and preservation reasons if they are part of a

permanent collection and it is not reasonably practicable to purchase a replacement.

What types of work can I copy for preservation? You will now be able to preserve films, broadcasts, sound recordings and artistic works

(including photographs), as well as literary, dramatic and musical works.

How many copies can I make? The work can be copied as many times as necessary for the work to be preserved.

Can I copy (for archiving / preservation purposes) any work held by the library/archive/museum/gallery?

No. This exception will only apply to material held in the permanent collection of an institution that is not available for loan to the public

From Intellectual Property Office, Exceptions to copyright: Libraries, archives and museums, 2014 p.4

Top tips from library projects – Practicalities

Make sure that physical items are put back properly.

Each item numbered on item and catalogue record.

Each time a photo is scanned it risks the stability of the chemicals on the photograph – get it right first time.

Top tips from library projects – Volunteers

“Good - The luck of having an amazing volunteer”. Monitor and enforce cataloguing guidelines and house

style. How much detail should be captured? Subject terms – can use a few but not a thesaurus. “I would also ensure that where volunteers are

organising exhibitions, they have a group leader to coordinate delivery.”

Love your volunteers….. “volunteers – they were brilliant. I think the team worked really well because we involved them in all aspects of the project and showed that we valued their feedback.”

Volunteers as ambassadors… “sense of ownership and pride in the project.”  

Top tips from library projects – stakeholders

Our communications strategy – press, Facebook, Twitter, mail shots, promotion via stakeholder meetings, websites and newsletters, sent material to tourist attractions, churches, resident groups, schools and supermarkets – they then did a lot of word of mouth publicity for us.

Working with stakeholders – we had support and consultation rather than a formal partnership but they all said that the project had brought them closer together and helped them to consider other ways of working together. All the organisations involved said that they would be happy to work with us again. We have now agreed to have an annual Discovery Day as our project Days went so well.

The relationship we built with the schools also worked really well – teachers appreciated that we asked them what they wanted, rather than just giving them what we thought they wanted. We deliberately avoided having lots of meetings, as they are already overloaded and asked them in when we had draft materials available. We sought their feedback at all stages and they could also see that we had acted on their suggestions / recommendations – this meant that they got tailor made resources that really matched their needs.

Conclusion

Be clear on what you want to achieve with your project.

Don’t just focus on digitisation projects.

IT challenges. New digitisation for conservation

rules.