Shop news

film preservation: the 1960s home

Photo preservation is so cool. 

Who doesn't have a box of film slides that has been sitting on the top shelf of a closet for years and years? That dusty container holds precious memories that have been all but forgotten. Many of the people in the images have been gone for at least a generation. Homes, furnishings, cars and gardens look different. Colors and styles have changed. 

By preserving these images, we bring the past back to life. Perhaps we realize that so much of what is gone has come back in style again. Perhaps we see something that inspires us. We reconnect with family and friends we haven't seen for decades. For the first time, we "meet" grandparents and great-grandparents who gave us our appearances and personalities. We discover our love for 1960s Cadillacs or mid-century furniture. We decide to work on our posture. We shop for classic clothes that we hope will still look good forty years from now. We turn off the TV and put down our iPhones. We live for today.

Film slides won't last forever. Even if they have been stored in their original boxes in a climate-controlled space, they are very susceptible to fading, dirt and scratches. As someone who considers these images to be priceless, I recommend preserving digital and print versions of every image. From there, make multiple copies, share with family and friends and store at least one copy of the digital files in a fireproof safe.  

Last summer, I started preserving our family slides and discovered I had a passion for the process. Gerald & Joan now offers film preservation as one of our service lines, and we'd love to help you preserve your family's images. More importantly, we want to encourage you to get those boxes out of the closet. The memories are much too special to lose forever. 

anna invitation suite

anna suite.jpg

I created the Anna program last fall for my brother-in-law and his bride's December wedding. The wedding took place in the Mississippi countryside at the bride's family church. It was an intimate affair that included a mixture of vintage and rustic details -- family heirlooms, natural touches and some handmade elements -- so the vintage handkerchief and doily design with birds suited the day perfectly. The bride liked the idea of using an array of fonts in a block format, so I selected several lovely fonts that worked well together. The result was a design that is simple, timeless and so pretty. 

I recently created the invitation and RSVP card to go along with the program, and I plan to add more pieces to the collection including menu cards and thank you notes. This is the first peek at the invitation suite. Samples are coming soon!

The great thing about a timeless design like this one is that it would work for a wedding in any season. The vintage hankie provides the foundation, and then the fonts and decorative motifs can be adjusted to fit any color scheme. To complete the look, we'd tie the invitation, RSVP card and response envelope together with vintage lace and place it inside a kraft envelope.

Interested in this design for your upcoming wedding? Contact us here to receive a custom proposal. We would love to help you tell your special wedding story.

Personal Photo Book Design

joanphotobook1
joanphotobook1

Behind the scenes here at Gerald and Joan, we are undergoing a brand review just in time for our one-year anniversary (coming up next month). We are reviewing every aspect of our brand including our logo, services, blog, website and even the website platform. When we launched Gerald and Joan last year, our lives looked drastically different, and as we've grown and changed, we felt our brand needs to reflect those changes. One of the new service offerings for 2014 will be photo books for personal, business and nonprofit clients. To show what we can do, I wanted to share this photo book that I designed as a Christmas gift for my mother. It is 100 pages and includes many of the family stories images that I have scanned over the past few months. It was a perfect gift for her, and it was so much fun to create. I hope that Gerald and Joan will be doing many of these books for clients in 2014. They make excellent gifts for birthdays, weddings, anniversaries, the list goes on and on! :)

joanphotobook2
joanphotobook2
joanphotobook3
joanphotobook3
joanphotobook4
joanphotobook4
joanphotobook5
joanphotobook5
joanphotobook6
joanphotobook6
joanphotobook7
joanphotobook7
joanphotobook8
joanphotobook8
joanphotobook9
joanphotobook9
joanphotobook10
joanphotobook10

Here's a peek at another photo book I created recently for my nonprofit client Habitat for Humanity of Greater Memphis.

Preserving Film Slides

As I've mentioned several times over the past few months, I inherited many boxes of vintage family film slides in September. Over the past month, I have been using my film scanner to scan, edit and preserve these slides. It has been a tedious process, but it is one that is well worth the time because so many of the images haven't been seen for 50 years. I was not yet born when my family lived in Palos Verdes, California. My family previously lived in Anchorage, Alaska (my grandparents and mother) and Green Mills, Ohio (my grandparents, great-grandparents and great-great-grandparents). As I never spent time in either of those places but heard about them growing up, these images are like a time machine that has taken me back through history to meet the people I never had the opportunity to know and see the places I wasn't able to experience first-hand. It has been a truly incredible, almost out-of-body experience. After sharing this project with family, friends and neighbors, I have been surprised by how many of them have similar boxes of slides that are decaying in their closets and attics. The combination of their stories and my own have inspired me to offer film and photo scanning, editing and archiving as services of Gerald & Joan when our new website launches later this season. My own family's stories have become such an integral part of this blog that it only seems fitting that the preservation of other people's stories should be a part of Gerald & Joan as well.

Here are just a few of the people and places I've seen lately:

Mr. Benham

My great-grandmother's second husband, Kent W. Benham, at their home in Palos Verdes, California.

Joan, Julie and Elsie

Joan, Julie and Elsie in Palos Verdes, California.

Cheri, Elsie and Julie

Elsie with her granddaughters, Cheri and Julie, in Green Mills, Ohio, several years before their move to California.

Elsie and Julie

Elsie visiting Julie in Anchorage, Alaska.

Clyde and Julie

Julie visiting her grandfather Clyde in Green Mills, Ohio shortly before his passing.