Frank53
Member
All negatives, 35 and 120, go in the the usual sleeves and then in binders. At the moment I have Hama 8 binders, which fill a full shelve in my bookcase.
Some 10 years ago I scanned all negatives on a low resolution (1200dpi) into Lightroom and devided them into subjects and periods. Every film is numbered in Lightroom and on the sleeve. So when I’m looking for a certain negative for printing, I check Lightroom for the number, and find the negative within 1 or 2 minutes. New films are scanned immediately after developing.
It took me a few months to scan 40 years of negatives, but using batch scanning and the fully automatic position of the scanner made it an easy job. The archive is backed up every day so not much chance of loosing it.
In general my life is not very organized, so If I had not done this, I would never be able to find back any negative.
Regards,
Frank
Some 10 years ago I scanned all negatives on a low resolution (1200dpi) into Lightroom and devided them into subjects and periods. Every film is numbered in Lightroom and on the sleeve. So when I’m looking for a certain negative for printing, I check Lightroom for the number, and find the negative within 1 or 2 minutes. New films are scanned immediately after developing.
It took me a few months to scan 40 years of negatives, but using batch scanning and the fully automatic position of the scanner made it an easy job. The archive is backed up every day so not much chance of loosing it.
In general my life is not very organized, so If I had not done this, I would never be able to find back any negative.
Regards,
Frank