(Quite long - the kicker is the last paragraph, if you are in a rush)
I am sure we all have a treasured shoe-box of old family photos: real photos - silver emulsion. I have some that include great-grandparents. Kept in the dark they will last almost as long as the paper holds together.
What's going to happen to all the digital pix we have spread over phones and laptops? Sure, you can archive them but how? Who can remember floppy disks and zip disks. CDs and DVDs are on their way our except to drive kids' seat-back entertainment centres. Even if you keep the media safe you (or your kids) won't have a player to view them on.
How to archive digital photos? Here is a personal view from a digital native: I was using the Internet back when you had to have a connection with the US defense establishment, or work in a university (or in my case both). I am still very comfortable in the digital space.
In spite of this background, or because of it, my view is to forget digital and print your photos. Get some archival ink for your printer and some decent paper and spend the lock-down printing a carefully curated selection of photos and write the details on the back. The prints don't need to be big: this is legacy, not fine art.
I am sure we all have a treasured shoe-box of old family photos: real photos - silver emulsion. I have some that include great-grandparents. Kept in the dark they will last almost as long as the paper holds together.
What's going to happen to all the digital pix we have spread over phones and laptops? Sure, you can archive them but how? Who can remember floppy disks and zip disks. CDs and DVDs are on their way our except to drive kids' seat-back entertainment centres. Even if you keep the media safe you (or your kids) won't have a player to view them on.
How to archive digital photos? Here is a personal view from a digital native: I was using the Internet back when you had to have a connection with the US defense establishment, or work in a university (or in my case both). I am still very comfortable in the digital space.
In spite of this background, or because of it, my view is to forget digital and print your photos. Get some archival ink for your printer and some decent paper and spend the lock-down printing a carefully curated selection of photos and write the details on the back. The prints don't need to be big: this is legacy, not fine art.
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