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What to do with 400 historical 8x10 glossy San Francisco photographs??

It just came to my mid that you might look up Richard Schwartz the Berkeley historian. He's published several books on SF history with lots of old photos, and still gives historical society talks, and would have good contacts. I haven't spoken to him in several months; but there is plenty on the web about him and his past books.
 

In Utah my first and highest recommendation would be the University's special collections library -- in Utah they are legally charged with collecting stuff like this, and gladly do so. The California Historical Society would also be someplace that would probably gladly give body parts for such a donation.
 

Great suggestion! I called them and talked to their curator. Like others have noted, staffing for curating is a challenge so they could be the keepers for a while until things improve. I will seriously consider these nice people for the future. As for now, I might be changing my focus.
 

Very nice of you to share all this and your comments. The thing is, I have 1,500 negatives (4x5) and about 400 prints. I shared only a handful in my original post. The other 394 contain some really amazing shots. I think something great is in their future. Thanks for you input!
 

The options seem endless now! I knew I did the right thing by asking for suggestions on this forum. You guys are amazing, and very generous. Thank you. My head is spinning.
 

Excellent! I'm making a list of the likely repositories and this rates high. Thank you for the suggestion.

They are a great resource. Thanks!
 

Thank you! I do need some ideas on what to do next. I will find him
 


The Oakland Museum of California (just across the Bay) is another possibility. If there is location and date information to go with the print/negative catalogue, it would be more attractive as a set.

Good Grief and God Bless your father..!!!
That is a pirates buried treasure of SF Photos.

Many of those buildings no longer exist. Your collection brings them back to life.
The places that do still survive are a wonder to see ....... begging for a "Then and Now" treatment.


As others have said, these photos bring back to life the styles and fads of the day. Cars, clothing, movie showings, etc etc.

I lived in SF until 2005. We miss it deeply.
When we moved, it never occurred to us that we would never be able to afford to go back.
It remains one of the biggest regrets of our life.

I would love to sit with a "SF History Expert" ..... look at all of those pictures and discuss each one separately.
Incredible
Amazing
Simply Incredible

These pictures represent a unique opportunity to document SF history.
I truly hope one (or more) of the above links cab facilitate preserving and organizing these awesome photos.

Than You and Good Luck
 
@Nancy123, have you found a home for your photos, or do you still have them?

If it's not too late, I would encourage you to pick out a few favorites to either keep -- or scan -- so you will always have them as a reminder of your father's work. And if you do scan some of them, we would love to see them here.
 

Hi CMoore. Thank you for the nice words and I'm glad to see my posting is still alive I've decided to keep all the negatives and I'm in the process of scanning them at hi-res to upload to pic-time.com with the intent to sell there. I have a domain name and will be working on the uploads this week as a test. I will order one for myself to check the quality. It will also just be a place for San Francisco fans to enjoy looking at them. I'll post here when it goes live later this week. Thank you for your interest!
Nancy
 
 
runswithsizzers: Thank you and if you read my reply to CMoore above you will see what I plan to do with them and yes, I will make them available for viewing. With 400 of them, I will choose the best but it will be a rather long term project! Thank you for your interest and post.
Nancy