DREW WILEY
Member
- Joined
- Jul 14, 2011
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I've done a fair amount of restoration work with really old negatives and prints. Now it's even a lot easier to do that kind of work through scanning and digital restoration. Lots of old cellulose nitrate-bass negatives were deliberately destroyed due to being a fire hazard. Damp humid spaces are bad for all kinds of materials. The mildew and mold risk alone is a significant factor. Dry climates are a lot more favorable to old negatives.
Color negatives have improved quite a bit in recent decades in terms of being usable awhile, but otherwise, can be a weak link in the chain, particularly any so-so processed amateur film examples. I'm not having any problem reprinting 20 or 30 year old sheet film negatives professionally processed; but I store them carefully.
Unless someone has their own drum scanner, it would be awfully expensive to digitally record a large number of chromes or negatives without lossy issues. Then who is going to preserve all those files themselves? When I was a college student, information was stored on punch cards. What happened to all of those? A half century from now, every form of cyber storage we're currently doing might be equally obsolete.
Color negatives have improved quite a bit in recent decades in terms of being usable awhile, but otherwise, can be a weak link in the chain, particularly any so-so processed amateur film examples. I'm not having any problem reprinting 20 or 30 year old sheet film negatives professionally processed; but I store them carefully.
Unless someone has their own drum scanner, it would be awfully expensive to digitally record a large number of chromes or negatives without lossy issues. Then who is going to preserve all those files themselves? When I was a college student, information was stored on punch cards. What happened to all of those? A half century from now, every form of cyber storage we're currently doing might be equally obsolete.
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