Hi All!
Aside from bicycle-related stuff...
Currently, I am engaged in scanning and cataloging some vintage Keystone View Company stereoscopic slides belonging to a friend. He unearthed them while administering his late father's estate, and shared them with me. In what was surely a moment of stark insanity, I offered to scan and post them to a website so they could be enjoyed more widely than if he simply disposed of them at a local charity store or sold them on eBay as planned.
What at first looked like a fairly simple task became more complex when it turned out
all the cardboard slides were vertically warped from sitting in their case in a humid environment. It has taken over three months of effort, but I have managed to modify my scanner and processing software to correct the resulting "astigmatism" and am at last getting some good results. The slides are also moldy, so each one requires post-scanning cleanup and restoration. It requires about 20 minutes' work per card or more than 66 hours' for the lot now I've got the needed steps down to a known routine.
Most of the slides date from around World War I and include the stereo photos on the front and a typed description on the back, all on dark cardboard with low contrast. Copyright shouldn't be an issue; the Keystone Viewing Company (with offices in Portland, OR, among other places) was dissolved in 1972, with 30 tons of company records and negatives donated to the University of California, Riverside. The name continues onward only as a manufacturer of eye-training equipment:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keystone_View_CompanyThere is some real historic content in these slides and descriptions, and the views are fascinating. I can't imagine the technical challenges of capturing such clear shots in wartime and on active battlefields; the quality is outstanding. My goal is to post the photos to a website for public viewing, but that is a ways away and depends on scanning the remainder of the slides, which number over 200. At the moment, it looks nearly impossible with my other tasks, but I'm continuing to persevere.
I've posted a sample restored scan below.
Best,
Dan. (...who wishes somebody would give him a good shake before he volunteers for such projects)