ClassyArts Blog

September 27, 2011

Pending Images Collection

Filed under: ClassyArts — ajmorris @ 11:00 am

As mentioned in earlier posts, I have begun a quick-and-dirty photo index, to supplement the Archives, which are just growing too slowly. The Pending Images archive just lists a title for the image, the full photographer’s name and address, and the estimated or inscribed date. For some images there are also additional comments. All this information is shown in the index.

For now, there is a link to the new database on the main image archives page, but in the near future I will be re-doing the whole header to give more navigation options.

As you can see from the over 700 images in the Pending Images Collection already, data entry is going much more quickly for this database, so that more of the ClassyArts collection is accessible. As with other images, you may purchase a single image if that is all you are interested in — but it is much less expensive (per image) to subscribe. Subscription also gives you access to the photographers database, and the dated images collection. Why not subscribe now? Prices will be going up in a few months, but existing subscribers will be locked-in at the lower price. Your support is essential for the continued growth of this site, and is much appreciated.

September 17, 2011

Dated Photographer Imprints

Filed under: ClassyArts, Dating Images — ajmorris @ 4:47 pm

One of the most useful photograph dating tools we have is a collection of images that can be dated to an exact or near-exact year. Sometimes the photographer has included the year in their imprint, or added a copyright notice that includes the year. Other times people have written the date on the photograph. With photographs from the 1864-1866 period when a tax stamp was required in the USA, the cancellation on those stamps often include the exact date.

Other images can be dated indirectly. It is not uncommon to find pictures of children or babies with their name and birth date written on them. We can guess the age within a year or so for children under ten. Other times a wedding photo may have the names of the parties involved. With photos like those, a bit of genealogical research may provide the year if we can find records for the subjects. In other cases the photographer’s imprint provides the year because they were known to operate at that address only one year, or because is shows a partnership that was similarly short-lived.

All told, we find about 5% or less of antique photographs have enough associated information to be able to confidently date them within a year or two. Those dated photographs can then be used to help date the other 95% of images for which we have little or no information. All the things we discuss in our dating old photographs section of the ClassyArts site can help us determine at least an approximate date for the undated images. Of all those clues, the photographer’s imprint is one of the best, due to its ubiquity and potential accuracy. Busy city photographers seem to have ordered new cardstock every six months or so; while even country practitioners seem to have rarely used the same imprint for more than two or three years.

Each style of imprint has its own limited term of popularity, but for a really narrow time-frame we need to know when a particular photographer used that particular style. To that end we have begun the Dated Photographer Imprint Collection. Derived from our dated images collection, the dated imprints focus just on the photographer imprint — information stamped or printed on the case, card or mat to identify the maker.

Surprisingly, we have less than half as many dated imprints as dated images! A large percentage of the dated images are on unmarked cards. Others have imprints that are duplicates, and we really only need one if no new information is provided. By duplicates we mean the same exact photographer imprint in the same year. Twenty cards showing members of a graduating class may all have the exact same imprints, only one is needed for the dated imprints collection – though the others are still useful in the dated images collection to show the range of clothing and hair styles, for example. If two cards have very similar imprints, but minor differences in typography, we add them both to the imprint collection — they represent different printings of the same basic imprint style. Two such near-matches from the same year suggests the newer one began that year. If we find a match the year before or after, we can then tell which one is the newer or older style.

For most imprints, of course, we are far from having that kind of detail available — but the larger the collection grows the more such information becomes available. Even a single imprint from a particular photographer provides a touchstone — we know matching imprints are probably from within a year or two of the known date, and can often tell from the style if other imprints are newer or older.

So today I put the Dated Photographer Imprint Collection online, beginning with the 835 imprints from 681 photographers indexed so far. That is from less than 1/3 of the dated images we have available, I’ll continue to add more records as time permits. Future monthly progress report blog posts will track that progress. Non-members will only see the list of photographers and the cities, along with comments associated with some imprints. Logged-in members (free or paid) will also see the year and street address (if any) for each imprint. For paid subscribers who have credits available, the names will be linked to images of the imprints, which may be viewed for two credits each. Those images are down-loadable, so paying members may retain those they view for future reference.

Some people have questioned why the images on ClassyArts are available only for a fee, when they are public domain — doesn’t that mean free? No, it does not. Collecting, indexing and making available copies of these images takes a lot of time and effort. Many photo-historians are employed and supported by institutions (which is why most of them give attention to famous photographers and artistic images rather than plebeian portraits of common folk by little-known photographers). Here at ClassyArts you are the only support we have, and if this site does not provide enough income to justify the time spent on it the harsh economic realities require that the time be diverted to more profitable endeavors.

This Dated Photographer Imprints Collection is a good example. If someone were to offer to pay me just $1 for each image in that collection (including additional images as they are added), I would gladly put the whole thing on-line for free access by all who want to use it. But my wife and I have grown too fond of eating to be able to do that without recompense. So support ClassyArts by becoming a subscriber now. We have over 80,000 records in the photographer database, and when that reaches 100,000 subscription prices will be going up — at current rates of growth I expect that be next Spring some time — but current subscribers will have their rates locked-in and not be affected by the increase.

September 9, 2011

Site Changes and $20,000 Tintypes

Filed under: ClassyArts — ajmorris @ 6:58 pm

I updated the site so that every page now has links to the Dating Old Photographs section, right up in the main navigation bar at top. I have laid out a skeleton of what I have planned for that section — subject to change of course. Right now there are 82 web pages of varying lengths in that section. Only 25 have content now, so the other 57 just have the ‘Coming Soon’ placeholder. I’ll add those figures to the monthly stats report to see how long it takes to fill in the others.

Speaking of monthly stats, that seems to be the only time I post messages lately, so I’m going to try to post more frequently, reporting some of the interesting things I learn about old photographs. Like news — did you hear about the case where someone recently threw an old photo into a Goodwill collection bin? An alert worker noticed it with some other things about to be shipped to a local outlet for sale — and took it to place on an online auction instead, in the Goodwill account. It sold for $23,001! The worker recognized the image as General Robert E Lee. A cased tintype, apparently it was a copy from another photo — but that original photo is not known, so the tintype may be the only copy left.

Also related to my monthly statistics for this site, you may have noticed I sped up the processing of images for placement in the Archives. But it is still growing way too slowly. So I’ve decided to add another section — Pending Images — where I will list some of the many thousands of images I have on disk, but have not yet added to the archive. Some of these images will never make it into the Archives — they are too small, or damaged, to be placed there. But they still have potential uses — they may help date or identify other images. Many of the images will go into the Archives eventually, but this will provide a way to access them until then. A great many are stereoviews. I was thinking of having a section just to list those, but this is better since it allows me to include the many photographers listed on card mounted images, with their full addresses. The Pending database will have a title for the image (name if the subject is identified, or has a printed title like most the stereocards do) and I’ll try to include the town name in that title. The photographer info will be recorded of course, and a very rough idea of the condition of the image will be noted — just four levels: poor, ok, good and excellent. All the good and excellent, and some of the ok images, will be added to the Archives eventually. There will be no thumbnail images, or detailed descriptions of the pictures. I can add about 30 images to that database per hour of work, whereas I can only get about 4 or 5 images added to the Archives in the same amount of time. I’ll continue working on both of course, but the Pending database should grow much faster.

September 4, 2011

August 2011 Progress Report

Filed under: ClassyArts — ajmorris @ 10:56 am

As usual, things did not go exactly as planned, but still there was substantial new material added to the site in August. Over 3500 new photographer records is a new single-month record I think, and 260 additional images is not bad. Had hoped to get the photographer imprints online, but that did not happen, though there are 230 more records/files in that collection. Hopefully I’ll get that online this month.

2011 Aug 31
79,282 Photographer records [3530 increase]
2120 Digital Images archives [266 increase]
791 Dated Photograph Imprints [231 increase]

I also mentioned the dating photographs section last month, and mentioned that I planned to open it to the public in September. In mid-August I made that available to subscribers through a link in the control panel, and towards the end of the month I updated a couple pages in the Photohistory section to promote the ebook mentioned in the preceding post — and left the links to the new section on those pages. So sometime this coming week I’ll update the rest the site, so that the new section is visible from any page. There is still a lot of work to be done on the dating photographs section, with many pages currently leading to ‘coming soon’ place-holder pages, but I hope to fill those in over the next two or three months.

Am also considering adding a new sub-site, and would like some feedback on the idea. The new site would be a sub-domain of ClassyArts (so the address would have a word instead of www in the address), and would be devoted to printed graphics. Things like art prints, postcards, trade cards, fashion plates, book illustrations, and similar public-domain images would be available in much the way photographs are on in the ClassyArts archives. It would work on subscriptions, similar to the photograph section but much cheaper — perhaps annual access for the same price as one month on the main site. Subscribers to the main site would automatically have access to material on the sub-site as well. Some feedback on this idea would be appreciated, any implementation of the project is several months out.

19th Century Trade Card

19th Century Trade Card

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