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Tips on Organizing Your Parents' Pictures

By Tricia Urlaub, published Mar 04, 2008
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It's a daunting task. The pile is 2- to 3-feet high, photos of all shapes, sizes and quality spilling over each other in shoe boxes that are in various states of disrepair.

Pictures, undated, of course, offering few clues as to what era they were taken, let alone any clues as to those who inhabit the photos.

You'd like to take on the challenge, to organize yours and your parents' history, to at least get the tangle of Polaroids, slides and snapshots into something that resembles order.

In this day and age of hands-on scrapbooking, nearly everyone is aware of the limitations and dangers of placing your photos in traditional photo albums. Those magnetized pages where the snapshot is practically glued to the page? Forget them, throw them out! At the very least you might consider reusing them for children's artwork that might otherwise get recycled (if you have the room). But what about the slip-in (pocket) albums, where each photo is safe from all others, no falling out, no overlaps, no glue? A better choice, but still not the best option.

The best place for your photos, old and new, are either placed in archival safe (acid and lignen free) storage boxes (with the hopes that one day each photo will find a home). Or in a scrapbook of archival quality (with pages that are acid and lignen free). The brand of choice for many scrapbookers is Creative Memories, however, CM can be costly, and there are many suitable brands available to consumers.

Before any active storage or scrapbooking can take place, you'll need to separate the photos by way of either year/event/person/place or something to that effect. Get a comfortable chair, because this process is bound to take a while. You might get lucky with pencil or pen date scratches on the back of some of the photos. Separate those out first. The ones that remain, study carefully. You may have an entire slew of similar photos, and the top one has already been dated and separated out.

For photos that have no date, become a detective... "How old does Mom look in this photo? She has the same style/color hair as in this photo dated... 1989..." "At what house did we have that ugly green shag?"

Takeaways
  • Organizing old photos help prepare you for special projects
  • Don't worry about getting exact dates
  • Throw away photos that don't mean anything to anyone!
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My parents have boxes and boxes of old photos...this article will probably help a lot of people!

Posted on 03/12/2008 at 1:03:46 PM

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