Subject: Large color image preservation grant
Large-Size Color Images: Addressing Issues of Preservation and Access Columbia University Libraries has received a grant from the Commission on Preservation and Access to investigate available methods for preserving oversize illustrations associated with printed text. Using digital and photographic services from several vendors, Columbia will identify the most effective methods currently available as well as the potential for contracting services for more comprehensive preservation projects. Five maps from the _New York State Museum Bulletin_, 1905 and 1906 issues, have been selected as a sample set of images. This set has been selected as a good example of many difficulties in preserving text and image combinations. The New York State Library has provided duplicates from their extensive collection for use in this project. Each map is a color image, on brittle paper, larger than the associated text format and folded to fit in a pocket. The nature of maps demands a high resolution to capture fine detail, but also the ability to look at broad areas easily. While true color is not necessarily an issue, the very subtle gradations of color are essential to the meaning of the map. By addressing these issues, the project will cover the key challenges for capture and display of illustrations for many fields, particularly those with informational rather than aesthetic content. Traditional microfilm for text and Ilfochrome microfiche for color images are regarded as sound preservation media. However the two formats are not easily used in tandem, sacrificing original context. This project will explore the addition of digital formats to facilitate greater access in the future through hypertext links, indexing, and network servers. Digital files will be produced by scanning the original maps with a flatbed scanner and a digital camera, scanning from full-frame Ilfochrome color microfiche produced in a previous project (also sponsored by the Commission), and by scanning from 4x5 E-6 transparencies produced as an intermediate format by Columbia's reprography lab. Files will be stored on digital tape and optical disk using a variety of compression and indexing methods. Display will include computer monitors of varying resolutions and outputs to large format color printers. The product from each vendor and each process will be compared and evaluated in several ways. Columbia's project staff include experts from the Preservation Division, the Geology Library, and Academic Information Systems. This panel will critically review the technical feasibility of each process and the acceptability of surrogate images for various user groups. Scanned images will also be available for external review using the World Wide Web and image access software such as Mosaic. A demonstration at the annual meeting of the Geological Society of America will provide an opportunity for examination by users who do not have network access. Columbia plans to use the methodology yielded by this project as the basis for preserving a large geoscience collection, including deteriorating material from the U.S. Geological Survey. This methodology will also be generalizable to other disciplines with text and image combinations in unusual and irregular sizes. The results of the project will be documented and widely distributed. Columbia would be interested in hearing from anyone else who is experimenting with digitization of large color images. Questions about this project are also welcome. Please send email to Janet Gertz at gertz [at] columbia__edu. *** Conservation DistList Instance 8:3 Distributed: Tuesday, June 21, 1994 Message Id: cdl-8-3-011 ***Received on Monday, 20 June, 1994