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Preserving Your Family History Memories. By Shirley-Ann Pyefinch Director Ottawa Ontario Stake Family History Centre The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Website: www.ottawastakefhc.on.ca Email: shirleyann@pyefinch.net. Outline. Definition of preservation or conservation
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Preserving Your Family History Memories By Shirley-Ann Pyefinch Director Ottawa Ontario Stake Family History Centre The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Website: www.ottawastakefhc.on.ca Email: shirleyann@pyefinch.net
Outline • Definition of preservation or conservation • What is the preservation or conservation of your family history memories? • Who to turn to for conservation needs? • What are some typical types of family history objects? • What to keep? • How to preserve your family history? (Handling and storage practices, digital preservation, disaster planning, etc.) • Resources available to help you • Questions?
What is Preservation or Conservation? • “All actions aimed at the safeguarding of cultural property for the future. The purpose of conservation is to study, record, retain and restore the culturally significant qualities of the object with the least possible intervention.”
What is the preservation orconservation of your family history memories? All actions aimed at safeguarding your family history objects for the future, regardless of media or format.
Who to turn to for Conservation needs? • Canadian Association for Conservation • http://www.cac-accr.ca/ • “Selecting and Employing a Conservator in Canada.”
Finding a Professional Conservator • http://capc-acrp.ca • Canadian Association of Professional Conservators
Using a professional conservator Courtesy of Kyla Ubbink’s Treatment Gallery on her website at: http://www3.sympatico.ca/kyla.ubbink/index.html
Before and After Treatment(Courtesy of Kyla Ubbink’s Treatment Gallery on her website - http://www3.sympatico.ca/kyla.ubbink/gallery.html )
What are some typical types of family history objects? • Paper documents • Photographs • Books • Textiles • Audio and Visual Recordings • Artifacts - paintings, sculptures, etc.
What to keep? Family History Information Resources: • People • Documents (civil, church, military, school, etc.) • Publications (books, newspapers, etc.) • Audio & Visual Recordings (CDs, DVDs, tape cassettes, etc.) • Internet (Google, familysearch, ancestry, blogs, forums, etc.) • Social Media – Facebook, Twitter, Myspace, etc. • Paper & Electronic records
What to keep?You may have to be selective in what you decide to keep, choosing the best items of archival or enduring value.
How to preserve your family history? • Quality products • A conservator • Storage and handling practices • Environment
Using the best quality products • Paper – acid free paper • CDs – high quality CDs (gold) • Toner – manufacturer’s • Archival safe products
Storage and Handling Practices • Understanding and caring for photographic materials
Care and Handling of Negatives • http://www.carrmclean.ca • Optimum 2 degrees Celsius • Temperatures below 21 degrees Celsius are recommended • RH 25 % (+-5%)
Caring and Handling of Photographs • Same general care as negatives • Framing Techniques • Safe storage • RH 30% to 35 % • 15 to 25 degrees Celsius
Photo Albums • Photo albums are another alternative for photo storage
PAT –Photographic Activity Test • Look for photographic products that are PAT tested • PAT = ISO Standard 14523 • Archival quality in photographic enclosures • Also tests components: -paper, -inks, -paints, -labels, -tapes, etc.
Digital Archiving of Family Photographs • Identify where you have digital files • Decide which files are most important • Organize the selected files • Make copies and store them in different places • Have a data migration strategy Recommend the US Library of Congress – Digital Preservation: http://www.digitalpreservation.gov • Video: “Why Digital Preservation is Important for You.” http://www.digitalpreservation.gov/videos/personal_archiving/index.html
Have a Disaster Recovery Plan for Your Family History • What is a disaster recovery plan? • Develop your own disaster recovery plan. • Identify essential records • Off-site storage • Accessibility • Divide and assign Responsibilities to various family members
Classification of Disasters Natural: • Floods, Hurricanes, Tornadoes, Earthquakes, etc. Manmade: • Hazardous material spills, Infrastructure failure, Security breaches, Viruses, Fires, etc.
Control Measures in a Disaster Recovery Plan • Preventative measures • Detective measures • Corrective measures Document your controls and test them
Care and Handling of Books • Careful handling • Avoid bookmarks, adhesive tapes, pressing flowers and storing newspaper clippings • Clean your books and inspect annually • Optimum storage temperatures 18 to 20 degrees Celsius • RH for books with leather bindings 45 to 55 % • Prevent fading
Preserving Paper Documents • Optimum storage 2o degrees Celsius • RH 30% • Choose the right kind of paper for the right job • Meet strength requirements • Use supports when handling fragile documents and store horizontally
Understanding the Stability of Photocopied Documents • Use permanent copy paper • Toner • Lighting • Temperature • Avoid direct contact with plastics (PVC=Polyvinyl chloride) • Instead use polypropylene or Mylar
Visual and Audio Recordings • Preservation copying • Best storage temperature • Keep magnetic tapes away from magnetic sources • Does the player still work? • Store in cases to protect from dust and exposure to light • Ideal temperatures is 8 degrees Celsius, RH=25%
CDs and DVDs • Ideal temperature is at 23 degrees Celsius • RH = 35 to 55% • Store in low light, vertical position in jewel cases • Lifespan or longevity is unknown • Best way to clean a CD or DVD is with compressed air • Avoid CD labels • Use archival quality CDs and DVDs
Conclusion • Documenting and Sharing Our Work • Providing Safe Storage • Careful Handling • Stable Temperature and Relative Humidity • Being Prepared for Emergencies by Having a Disaster Recovery Plan Remember: Preventative care is the best form of conservation!
Resources • Canadian Conservation Institute – CCI http://cci-icc.gc.ca • U.S. Library of Congress http://www.loc.gov/index.html • Canadian Association for Conservation – CAC http://www.cac-accr.ca/ • Canadian Association of Professional Conservators – CAPC http://capc-acrp.ca/index.asp • American Institute for Conservation – AIC http://www.conservation-us.org/ • International Institute for Conservation – IIC http://www.iiconservation.org/ • Carr McLean (Canadian Archival Supplier)http://www.carrmclean.ca/
Questions Thank you for coming! My email: shirleyann@pyefinch.net