Thursday, December 6, 2007

Geoff Schmalz 10th blog The Weather and a Place to Live

For my tenth blog I will discuss Weather and a Place to Live: Photographs of the Suburban West, a digital exhibit at Duke University which can be accessed from

http://cds.aas.duke.edu/exhibits/multimedia.html#

Selection Procedure: Sixteen images were chosen to try to show the effects of weather on the suburbs of the American West. They were chosen with the following quote in mind from the book Four Good Things by James McMichael: "They all made up a neighborhood, were part of that difference from house to house that showed most clearly in the mornings when the light canted around the mountain, lifted, stayed...What they'd been selling was the weather and a place to live and that was what was left."

Image Characteristics: The images are large, filling the entire page, and they are all in black and white. I believe the fact that the pictures are black and white lends them more power than color images would have had. The images have no enlarge link because they are already full page. It does not appear the images can be purchased as no mention of that possibility exists. The image from North Odgen Utah is particularly exciting because it shows a mobile home next to a house which is parked on what looks like 10 to 15 feet of rocks, likely weathered from the mountains behind the house. Because the images utilize Flashplayer they can be zoomed into and out of by right clicking on each picture.

Metadata: The metadata accompanying the gallery is quite limited. It does mention the location of each image and the year the image was taken as in this example from the sixth image :North Odgen, Utah, 1999. Also, above each image is the title of the Gallery: The Weather and a Place to Live. Above each image is found a close link for each picture as well.

Intended Audience: Anyone who is intrigued by the unique character of the American western landscape will enjoy this selection of sixteen pictures. People, who like me, enjoy the drama black and white images possess that color images do not, form another possible patronage for the gallery. This gallery is emblematic of the fact that a digitization project need not include a large number of images to be powerful and to communicate to web visitors in a way that words could never accomplish.

Welcome to the Virtual Antique Typewriter Museum


Welcome to the Virtual Antique Typewriter Museum

The typewriter museum showcases not only the different types of typewriters across time but also typewriter accessories, a few pieces of art work, and images from books about typewriters.

1. The museum is a virtual museum which indicates that they do not have a large physical museum space. They probably digitized all of their holdings. the best way to view the collection was by selecting the brands link. This gave letters of the alphabet to choose from and from there you could choose a brand to see the type of typewriter.

2.There was quite a bit of metadata. This included the year of production,the company that manufactured the piece, the serial number on the item, a small history of the item, and from what collection the item resides.

3.Each image only expanded once from the thumbnail but there were many images associated with each brand. For example, one image showed the front case while another would show the inner workings of the typewriter. I know very little about different kinds of typewriters so for the novice viewer, I could see generally how the machine operated, the way the keys were situated, and printed instructions on the machine

4. Based on the intricate pictures that showed the inside workings of the machine, the audience is probably someone who has at least rudimentary knowledge of typewriter history but the site was also enjoyable and informative enough to teach the novice.