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Ready, Set, Share!

Monday, November 7th, 2011

I had a wonderful time recently with 6 gals and 1 guy in my photo organizing workshop at Westerville Senior Center. It seemed fitting as we sorted memories that we met at the Everal Homestead in Heritage Park. What a beautiful facility!

As a group, we commiserated that we have more photos than we know what to do with. When I asked these questions to determine “Why photo organizing?” the group had some great answers! You have to laugh when the person sitting next to you says what you are thinking.

“What you don’t want?”

  • A hodge-podge of boxes and bins full of photos in closet, attic, or basement
  • Precious memories being eroded by those very popular, but acidic, sticky photo albums
  • Photos of vacations that your parents took with their friends
  • Not being able to find that picture you know you have when you need it
  • Blurry, dark or otherwise meaningless photos that you should have pitched 15 years ago

“What you do want?”

  • Less volume, more quality photos by choice
  • A definite order in place so you can find photos you love
  • Ability to easily share memories with friends and family
  • Know what your options are for storage and sharing photos, both physically or digitally

My next question was “Can you actually get there from here?” and the answer is: Definitely! These are the steps we practiced in the workshop.

  1. Gather all your containers of photos in one place.
  2. Choose 5-10 categories that most of your photos will fit into. For example – Travel, Friends, Church Folk, Family History, Childhood, Holidays, Work Life. Write each category on a sticky note or 3 x 5 card.
  3. Sort photos into your categories. (Attaching your titles to shoebox-sized Sterilite bins will work for this task, $1 at Odd Lots or Target.) Use rubber bands if necessary to keep specific events, dated pics together. Discard all duds, photo developing envelopes, and negatives. Keep the memories.
  4. Decide on a format for long term storage or sharing – archival quality album sleeves, scrapbooking, converting to digital on CD/DVD, archival boxes, etc.

Now you are ready to actually DO something with your photos. Here are your choices:

  • If you have lots of time, make the album, scrapbook, or CD.
  • If you have more money than time, hire someone else to do it.

If you have neither money nor time to spare, organize your categories into archival photo boxes (the modern version of a shoebox) and leave it for someone else to do when you are gone.

Whichever you choose, rejoice that you know where to find what you need and can share one box (album, scrapbook, or CD) at a time with friends and family!

What Mementos to Keep?

Monday, November 9th, 2009

This is a question I am frequently asked, and a difficult one to answer. These are a few thoughts:

1. Do keep those awards, photos, milestone markers that mean the most to you. Of course this requires that these items have a home,  preferably in one place in appropriate container(s). Basement/attic storage should be monitored for heat and moisture problems.

2. Only keep things that remind you of happy, positive events. I finally convinced my husband that he didn’t have to keep the fake flower arrangement from his grandmother’s funeral. There were so many good memories to hold onto instead.

3. Do not keep items out of duty. Just because someone you care about gave you something doesn’t imply a forever contract.  Especially for larger objects, take a photo and let go.

4. “Most paper is not meant to be saved forever.” I love this quote by a fellow Ohio organizer, Alicia Miller! Especially when we can scan and store on a wand why keep the piles?  I do have immigration records from my great-grandfather that I will keep; I need my marriage license. Most everything else can go.

5. Ask the question “Who is likely to care 20 years from now?” Is there someone in your family who enjoys history and would treasure those “old” things you are saving? Share those treasures now while you can give an accurate accounting of where they came from, who used the objects, etc. Then you are free not only of those things, but of the burden of being the only one who knows their significance.

If you have another thought that would help others decide which mementos to keep, please share!  We all need help in this area.


Drop Back and Punt – Photo Sorting

Friday, September 25th, 2009

Recently I was working with a gal who had quite a few photos she wanted to sort.  The good thing was most were still in the photoshop sleeves and contained in boxes.  The bad news was that the photos represented quite a few years of memories.

At first, we labeled photo boxes by year and tried to identify each sleeve by year.  Unfortunately, there were no mileposts that my client could use as clues to the years taken.  I would use my children’s ages, or the house we were in at the time as determinants.  Her children, however, were grown with young children.  She still lived in the family home of fifty+ years.

We decided to switch gears and sort by category instead.  The categories we used were:  children’s families (one pile for each child), trips with friends, church friends, and hometown visits.  That way there was less hesitation in sorting.

She wanted to send most of the photos to her  children anyway, so we were  halfway Powersort-medthere after sorting.  The Creative Memories Power Sort Box held the photos for each child (up to 2400.) The kids could mix and match on their own.  My client could select the photos that she wanted to keep and offer the rest to friends.

In organizing, if at first you don’t succeed, sometimes you just have to punt.  In this case, it worked!

Organizing Photos Turned Digital

Friday, May 29th, 2009

If you are ready to clean out and organize those many shoe boxes of photos, slides and home movies, “there is an app for that.”   Several companies stand ready to help you in the conversion of prints, negatives, slides, videos and reel-to-reel film to digital format .   The only question is – do you have more time, or more money?  Let’s start with the least labor-intensive (and most expensive!) of the three.

ScanDigital is a highly regarded digital scanning/organizing solution.  Customers simply request a UPS label from the website and send a box of images to be scanned.  The Best Package Offer will scan 500 photos, negatives or slides for $319.95 (or an average of $.68 per item scanned.)  This service does allow you to choose a higher resolution, up to 600 dpi.  Individual care per photo includes cropping, upright rotation, and color correction.

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