Friday, July 27, 2012

Silently Moving, all Over the Globe

The Claude and ZerNona Black collection has three cans of 16mm Kodachrome, double notched (no soundtrack) film. This week I decided to tackle finding out the condition and content of the films, because confirmation of this is essential to deciding whether or not digitization is worth the expense.

How I wished for a Steenbeck to accomplish my task, as I decided that the brittleness and dryness of the film would make putting it through the available projector too risky.  No matter, I decided to unwind manually and look at the frames through a light box and 10x loupe. (Yes, it was more than a little time consuming.) But, within a workday, I knew everything I needed to know in order to make the decision to digitize.

Each of the three films is in the “amateur home movie” genre. For many years, films such as these have been regarded as throwaway or lacking in depth, certainly not worthy of scholarly research. But, the tide has turned in archives and film studies, and keeps turning. The preservation of amateur home movies is now regarded  (rightly, in this archivist’s opinion) as rich with meaning and potential for interpretation. Some will view the films as mildly entertaining, and others will find them a gold mine of clues embedded in a social and cultural context. The importance of home movies has produced a Home Movie Day©, endorsed by movie auteur Martin Scorsese and critic Leonard Maltin. Relative to home movies and similarly small, popularly produced films with no known author, the National Film Preservation Foundation was created to provide awareness and financial support for the preservation of orphan films, “as the then little-known films came to be called,” which “painted a portrait of America not found in history books.”

The digitization of these three films will contribute to a growing effort to preserve this ephemera in motion, so informing American popular history.

I believe this is A. Philip Randolph on the front porch of
Claude and ZerNona Black's home, film processed July 1959

Two men at airport, about to board a plane,
film processed July 1959
In my frame-by-frame examination, I attempted to photograph on the light box, partly to try to identify certain people present in the films, but also to share here on the blog. Here are four of the shots I obtained – they’re a bit fuzzy because of my photography method, but the actual image on the frames and the color quality are surprisingly good.

ZerNona in Paris
Claude and ZerNona in the Middle East,
on camels

Friday, July 20, 2012

Brochure for the Claude and ZerNona Black Papers


I am posting this brochure I created to share more details about the contents of the Claude and ZerNona Black Papers. Please feel free to share any comments or questions about the collection that you may have. I am currently processing away, as well as writing for newsletters, announcements, and grants, and gearing up for Fall plans for digitization, student workers, and a preview exhibit in Special Collections and Archives!