Archiving scanned negatives is kinda a chore than something I enjoy because mostly it seems many things are not standardised and even the same company did not check if everything fits together. I'm using currently negative pockets by the German company Herma. But because you put the negatives in from the top instead from the side it is not easy to keep them there. they like to fall out. I'm currently considering PrintFile ones, because they have a similar size and would fit into the binders I'm using, at least I think they will.
The next thing I need, is a table of contents for the archive. I'm not sure about which information I should include, besides film roll number, a description, dates, film used and maybe the ISO. Sadly for most films I have only the information on the roll itself, no written information about film or ISO. And for which I have these information, my father used DIN instead of ISO. He also noted when he used a different ISO setting on the camera, eg. Ilford HP4 shot with 29 DIN (640 ISO).
Any ideas or inspiration how to includes this in the table of contents would be appreciated. Of course also helping in identifying films, I had a list from VueScan which included some films but certainly not all.
The next thing I need, is a table of contents for the archive. I'm not sure about which information I should include, besides film roll number, a description, dates, film used and maybe the ISO. Sadly for most films I have only the information on the roll itself, no written information about film or ISO. And for which I have these information, my father used DIN instead of ISO. He also noted when he used a different ISO setting on the camera, eg. Ilford HP4 shot with 29 DIN (640 ISO).
Any ideas or inspiration how to includes this in the table of contents would be appreciated. Of course also helping in identifying films, I had a list from VueScan which included some films but certainly not all.