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Re: [OM] Bad processing of film driving people to digital?

Subject: Re: [OM] Bad processing of film driving people to digital?
From: Brian Gray <bandvg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Thu, 29 Aug 2002 22:08:53 +0100
Andrew Beals wrote:...Now, let's talk about family images frittering away. How many family photos
from the sixties and seventies that are in color and not on Kodachrome still
hold true to their original color, even in print form?  How many family
albums are held in archival albums with acid-free mounts?....

Maybe. I do not think many in the UK were using colour print in the sixties but I agree that I do have some slides on Kodachrome from the period. However, I have quite a lot of black and white prints from that period and well before. For example, I have copies of two B/W prints of great grandparents who died in 1900 and 1904 respectively and several family groups from the twenties and thirties. I also have prints showing the then family V-twin motorbike (a Rudge) with my father and an uncle aboard, one of which reveals the bike had a sidecar attached which my grandmother rode in (and also records that the bike needed roadside adjustments on occasion !). I also have postcards sent by my father during the first world war showing photographs of the aftermath of fighting in his area (NE Italy). These pictures are not all in pristine condition, and some are photographic copies of originals made by the current owner of the latter using a 50mm N*k*n lens and short extension tube, but they are fascinating to me as family history. I am very doubtful if any CD-R or CD-RW disc made now will be physically readable in 70-100 years time even if the software is available as I accept is quite likely. To add another question to those on ethics. I also have a colour photographic copy of a hand tinted B/W photograph taken professionally of my mother in a wedding outfit, probably in 1926. Would such tinting of a wedding photograph to show the colour of the dress and the colour of the roses forming her bouquet be considered ethical? I would have thought so, while some of the battlefield photographs referred to above might now be regarded as unethical.
Brian


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