h a l f b a k e r yThere's no money in it.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register.
Please log in or create an account.
|
This non-profit foundation would accept donations of family photographs and home movies when they are no longer needed or wanted in the family. The idea would be to not let this important anthropological resource go into the garbage. Eventually, movies and photos would be digitized and organized so
that people doing research could access them. The museum/archive would be funded by ... the government.
A little bit baked
http://www.diddly.com/random/ Already digitized, but not funded by the government. [Worldgineer, Oct 04 2004, last modified Oct 21 2004]
(?) Trachtenburg Family Slideshow Players
http://www.slidesho...ers.com/jtmain.html Alternate use already baked [krelnik, Oct 04 2004, last modified Oct 21 2004]
[link]
|
|
There's a wacky Seattle-based group/family that buys such photos at yard sales and such, and then composes songs to go with slideshows of the photos. Saw them on TV last year, they're hilarious. See link. |
|
|
I remember going through a couple of family albums in a second hand shop upstate somewhere, thinking that at least the pudgy children pictured must still be alive, and certainly their descendents, and wondering what kind of mechanism could reunite them with the albums. I also considered passing it off as my own family. |
|
|
(We have a large portrait of a lad from the 19th century, that we occasionally pass off as the young Lord Aloysius Chalmondley Sealy, for a moment or three.) |
|
| |