The End? Never!

… of Decomposition Week… and this piece of film.

Not the end of the story.

Thank you for joining me for Decomp Week! I had some great feedback off-line, so a big thanks to everyone who has been reading this. Nitrate Day had the largest number of views this week and with good reason. Intriguing stuff for the film and archive nerds among us. As I mentioned (several times) these films represent only a fraction of the film collection in the Byrd archive. The majority of the films are in good and preservable condition. The work I’m doing now is to help preserve these films by performing film inspection, needed repair, cleaning,  and rehousing, as well as reviewing content.

For more photos of the infamous representatives of the  collection, check out the flickr set here.

(my desk. because i know you weren’t wondering.)

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So far during this internship I have utilized several resources. Most predominantly for Decomp Week:

The Film Preservation Guide: The Basics for Archives, Libraries, and Museums. National Film Preservation Foundation2004.

Enticknap, Leo. Moving Image Technology. Wallflower Press: London, 2009.

“Film Preservation Handbook.” National Film and Sound Archive of Australia.

Handling of Processed Film.” Kodak.

Pincus, Edward and Steven Ascher. The Filmmakers Handbook. New York: Plume, 1984.

Museum Handbook, Part 1: Museum Collections.” National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior.

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Curious penguin hopes everyone has a great weekend!!

About polararchivesintern

Kristin MacDonough is a Texas born University of Texas baccalaureate and Moving Image Archiving and Preservation graduate student at New York University interning for the summer of 2012 with The Ohio State University's Byrd Polar Research Center Archival Program. Say that five times fast. (I'm also an amateur science nerd and it appears I'm a big fan of universities.)