The Northern California Technical Processes Group 's 79th Annual Meeting is 
less than a month away. Register now to start or renew your membership and 
attend the Annual Meeting. $35 in advance, $40 at the door. And after the 
meeting, there are optional tours of the SF Public Library History Center, the 
GLBT History Museum, and the Tenderloin Museum. Please visit our homepage for 
our press release, registration, and tour signups: 
<https://norcaltpg.wordpress.com/>  https://norcaltpg.wordpress.com/

 


Beyond Books: Capturing the Unique in Community Collections


The San Francisco Public Library

100 Larkin St., (at Grove).

Koret Auditorium, located on the Library’s lower level

Enter 30 Grove St., proceed down stairs

9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. Friday, May 6, 2016

Perhaps they are hidden in a storeroom or stacked on your desk awaiting 
attention. Sometimes they are held by communities which lack the resources to 
preserve and disseminate their materials. Audio, video, physical objects, and 
ephemeral print materials often do not fit into normal technical processing 
workflows. This year's NCTPG Annual Meeting covers collections of 
non-traditional materials, including their acquisition, metadata, digitization, 
and preservation. How do we open up hidden and community collections, and make 
them more accessible and discoverable? What are the possibilities for 
collaboration with experts outside our institutions, other institutions, and 
the members of the communities we serve? How can we honor local perspectives 
and capture their unique voice in the collections we create and preserve?

 

This year’s speakers and presentations are:

Archiving for All / Michelle Krasowski <https://www.archive.org>  (Internet 
Archive)

At the Internet Archive we have been working towards the goal of Building 
Libraries Together, encouraging our users to archive and upload content from 
their locations. We hope to create a collection that can be used for research 
and discovery, representative of a diverse global community that has an 
interest in preserving and sharing the aspects of their cultural landscape with 
other users of different backgrounds, interests, and geographic locations. 
There are solutions that can give marginalized communities with limited 
resources the opportunity to digitize and share their materials online in a way 
that is financially and technologically possible for them.

Sharing Knowledge through Community-Assisted Cataloging, and Generous 
Distribution of Media Assets / Al Bersch (Oakland Museum of California and GLBT 
Historical Society)

Using case examples from the Harold O’Neal film collection at the GLBT 
Historical Society and Andrew J. Russell’s glass plate negatives documenting 
the construction of the transcontinental railroad at the Oakland Museum of 
California, this talk will consider various strategies for “opening” 
collections processing, as well as access. From acquisition, to cataloging, to 
sharing digital assets on the Digital Public Library of America, we'll focus on 
the procedural changes these institutions underwent to make it possible to 
improve access to previously “hidden” collections.

 

Sharing Our Special Collections With the World -- Lessons Learned / Geoffrey 
Skinner and Jon Haupt (Sonoma County Library)

Sonoma County Library has worked to digitize and make available online its 
extensive special collections of photographs, rare books, wine-related 
materials, and local historic items. Today the Library leverages outsourcing 
and partnerships to bring over 40,000 digitized items with extensive metadata 
to the Web. Statistics show worldwide viewing and great local interest, yet 
many challenges remain: prioritizing collections, choosing platforms, 
developing standards-based workflows, preserving the digital and physical 
objects, developing and maintaining partnerships. In addition to describing the 
ways we are addressing these challenges, we will also illustrate a particular 
case—an ongoing project of the Sonoma County Wine Library. The project's 
numerous challenges—with regard to metadata, partnerships and 
infrastructure—will be described, along with the ongoing efforts to meet those 
challenges.

 

Inconvenient Objects and Surprising Workflows / Rick Prelinger (Prelinger 
Archives)

 

While materials such as moving images, artifacts and print ephemera can be of 
high interest to researchers and traditional library patrons, they are often 
the most difficult kinds of objects to process and preserve. Although many 
institutions have traditionally addressed this issue through studied neglect, 
this is not an option with unique and fragile materials in obsolete formats. 
This talk offers hopeful examples of new and sometimes unconventional workflows 
to handle film, video and ephemeral print materials (including the story of the 
San Francisco Participatory Archives Group, which processed 4,800 home movies 
in two years), and suggests that the time has come for experimenting with a 
host of innovative practices in technical processing.

 

Please visit our homepage for our press release, registration, and tour 
signups: <https://norcaltpg.wordpress.com/>  https://norcaltpg.wordpress.com/

 <https://norcaltpg.wordpress.com/> 


If you have any questions about the event, please contact Robert Rohrbacher at 
650-725-7992 or email us at: [email protected].

*This is not a San Francisco Public Library Sponsored Program. Please use 
public contact information provided here.

*Please note: Refreshments are not allowed in the Auditorium 

 

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