Brian Walters wrote:

Hi Brian,

> I agree with Leon in that it doesn't matter much how you 
> store slides, provided they are stored safely and provided 
> there is a way to easily retrieve the ones you want.

When you have a packing boxes full of slides, it becomes a major problem.
 
> Mine are in clear plastic sheets in ring binders but each 
> slide is listed in a database with keywords and other details 
> so that I can search for a particular topic.  If the system 
> works, it will direct me to the appropriate page in a binder. 
>  Of course, how well it works depends on how well the 
> database is set up and mine doesn't always work...........

That sounds a good system to me, the thing is having got three systems of
storage; development mailing boxes, plastic sheets and real large boxes with
individual slide slots, I like the latter the best of all. What I currently
have is not economical on space though, but it's a matter of choice.
 
> Setting up a database can be a bugger if you have thousands 
> of slides in the backlog - but if the system is set up so 
> that any new slides are added immediately, the backlog can be 
> reduced over a period of time.  When I set mine up I had 
> about 3000 slides to catalogue - I did this over a period of 
> about 6 months and have never regretted the time spent.  The 
> database has now expanded to list about 5000.

As I have mainly taken slides and the collection goes back to 1970, I think
I'm in the same territory of backlog and yes I agree that the backlog would
have to go over time, particularly where I would have to view the slides to
catalogue them properly....actually, sounds a rather nice job for the Winter
with the long nights :-)
 
> The database I use is Alpha 5 but a spreadsheet should work 
> almost as well.  I'm hoping to adapt the same system when I 
> eventually go digital.

My wife is great on such matters and I will fob this off onto her...er..I
mean seek out her experience in achieving this.

Malcolm 


Reply via email to