Kathy's Corner at Projectkin

Barbara at Projectkin

Archives of our Kathy's Corner events. These remarkable events bring you the expert advice of a professional archivist and photo manager as she tackles her own collection. To learn more about the next Kathy's Corner events scheduled, see Projectkin.org/events. Available now as both recordings and audio streams in your favorite podcast player. projectkin.substack.com

  1. FEB 27

    Kathy’s Corner » Postcards Part 2: How to Organize and Manage the Collection » Feb 2026

    Many thanks to our fantastic speaker, Kathy Stone and our audience, including Ann Rockley, Bill Moore, Jane Chapman, Jennifer Jones, Kyla Bayang, and Linda Teather. Our wonderful audience today was treated to an incredibly useful summary of archival tools, insights, and perspectives from an expert who has dealt not only with museum-quality materials but also the practical trade-offs of preserving family artifacts. Did a friend share this post? Fantastic! Learn more about Projectkin and join our community of family historians hooked on stories. Projectkin.org/about. Today’s episode focuses on a topic not yet covered in the RootsTech conference program, at the foundation of almost every family’s collection: the physical materials among the inherited stuff. The topic came up in the context of her epic program in December when Projectkin members Jill Swenson, Linda Teather, Dr. Mary M. Marshall, Ellen Thompson-Jennings, Jayme Blenkarn, and Paula Collins stepped up to share postcards in their family collections. Looking at these incredible items and the memories they held reminded us of the importance of preserving them properly. Postcards slip into that sometimes uncomfortable space between museum-quality artifact and cheap souvenir. As we quickly learned, one can damage the other. At the conclusion of her talk, there was an offline discussion of programming at RootsTech as it related to archiving. There are few sessions tailored to this, just one class surfaced: * An Archivist’s Guide to Preserving and Managing Your Family Treasures with Katharine Korte Andrew (includes a syllabus for the talk). Kathy additionally recommended a vendor talk from * How to Save and Share Your Genealogy Research and Memories for Generations with Glen Meakem of Forever.com. No syllabus was provided. The following are resources and references Kathy mentioned in her talk. Though many of the listed blogs and videos can be provided by vendors, they’re offered without affiliate or sponsored links. Archival Resources & References Archival Methods * ArchivalMethods.com * ArchivalMethods.com/blog/how-to-begin-to-preserve-your-family-archive * ArchivalMethods.com/blog/agents-of-deterioration * ArchivalMethods.com/blog/preventing-light-damage * ArchivalMethods.com/blog/postcards-archival-care-for-preservation * ArchivalMethods.com/blog/how-to-store-old-letters-and-documents * ArchivalMethods.com/blog/archival-definitions-acid-free-buffered-unbuffered * ArchivalMethods.com/blog/beyond-photo-safe-mean * ArchivalMethods.com/product/textile-storage-kit * From Archival Methods’ YouTube channel @ArchivalMethods: Gaylord * Gaylord.com * info.Gaylord.com/resources/what-does-that-mean-acid-lignin-free * info.Gaylord.com/resources/acid-free-vs-archival Certifications for Permanence (“Acid-free”, lignin-free, etc.) * Image Permanence Institute rit.edu/ipi * Photographic Activity Test rit.edu/ipi/photographic-activity-test * ISO 18916 iso.org/standard/84731.html * Photographic Activity Tests of Various Adhesives resources.culturalheritage.org/pmgtopics/2013-volume-fifteen/61-T15_Down_et_al.pdf Canadian Sources * carrmclean.ca/archival-supplies.html * provincialarchives.alberta.ca/shop * canada.ca/en/conservation-institute.html Resources for Postcards * worldpostcardday.com/history * phototree.com/book_photo_postcard.htm * playle.com/realphoto * siarchives.si.edu/history/featured-topics/postcard/postcard-history * library.ualberta.ca/peel/postcards/the-postcard-a-brief-history * postalmuseum.org/collections/highlights/postcards * southpeacearchives.org/blog/the-art-of-postcards-history-in-the-mail * vintagepostcards.ca/Postcard_Eras.html * lib.umd.edu/institute-american-deltiology * joycetice.com/johnson/catalog/rppc.html (Exaggerated Postcards) * britannicauctions.com/blog/rppc-postcards * postcardhistory.net/2020/08/a-look-at-leather-postcards About Kathy With her decades of experience as a professional photo organizer, Kathy always has another special insight to get us through it. Learn more about Kathy’s Coaching. As Projectkin, we’re here to help families tell their stories in any form. I feel strongly that our collections of photos and other artifacts are key to our memories and, in turn, our stories. If you think this post might interest a friend or colleague, why not just pass it along? These are public posts, and our events are free. You can also bring your friend along to join us at our next Kathy’s Corner event. See our calendar for upcoming events. We’ve partnered with Geneabloggers in the RootsTech Ride Along this year. Please visit our joint site at RideAlongPartners.org to learn more. Get full access to Projectkin at projectkin.substack.com/subscribe

    1h 5m
  2. Kathy’s Corner » Goals, Quests and Getting Stuff Done: What's Your Plan? » January 2026

    JAN 23

    Kathy’s Corner » Goals, Quests and Getting Stuff Done: What's Your Plan? » January 2026

    Thank you for joining us today, Jane Chapman, Jennifer Jones, Marian Beaman Becky Hetchler, Linda Teather, Marci Keats Rudolph 🙏, Bill Moore, Kimberley, and so many more. What a fantastic start to the new year. I was touched by the range of discussion. It has put us in a wonderful, positive mindset for planning and making forward progress in our journeys this year. I was especially touched by the notion of supporting, nudging, and encouraging each other along on the journey. Did a friend share this post? Fantastic! Learn more about Projectkin and join our community of family historians hooked on stories. Projectkin.org/about. As Projectkin, we’re hooked on family history stories. So often, these stories start with the stuff left for us by our ancestors. Deciding what to do with them is often a fast path to a Gulf of Overwhelm. In Kathy’s Corner, we’re here to get through it together. Today’s episode, Kathy Stone takes us by the hand to talk seriously about setting goals, or just taking a fresh look at goal setting. Below are a few useful resources mentioned during our conversation: Resources We’ll start with Kathy’s own post that started this conversation: As background, Kathy shared the post that inspired her to look at what she was trying to accomplish as a quest. This post from Ashley Janssen, “Why Traditional Goal Setting Doesn’t Always Work and What To Do Instead,” had her thinking about “growth loops.” That set us off on a discussion of goals in the context of a journey, a quest. As we went around the Zoom, Jennifer Jones added insight, reflecting on a new year post she’d released for her alternative publication, The Retirement Phase: We also discussed strategies for managing the overwhelm in terms of your genealogical research. One approach Jane Chapman mentioned combines her research on three substacks (BJNL’s Genealogy and Kyeburn Diggings One-Place Study) with a repository using the WeAre.xyz platform. About Kathy With her decades of experience as a professional photo organizer, Kathy always has another special insight to get us through it. Learn more about Kathy’s Coaching. As Projectkin, we’re here to help families tell their stories in any form. I feel strongly that our collections of photos and other artifacts are key to our memories and, in turn, our stories. If you think this post might interest a friend or colleague, why not just pass it along? These are public posts, and our events are free, made possible by the support of our Patrons. You can also bring your friend along to join us at our next Kathy’s Corner event. See our upcoming events here . Get full access to Projectkin at projectkin.substack.com/subscribe

    58 min
  3. 12/05/2025

    Kathy’s Corner » Postcards: Pictures, Stories, Art, and History » December 2025

    Thank you for joining us today, Jane Chapman, Jennifer Jones, Kimberly C, Kyla Bayang, Lynda Heines, Marci Keats Rudolph 🙏, Marilyn Woodbury, Trish Bittroff and so many more. We also wanted to extend a hearty thank you to our amazing speakers today, Jill Swenson, Linda Teather, Dr. Mary M. Marshall, Ellen Thompson-Jennings, Jayme Blenkarn, and Paula Collins It was a wonderful session with so many stories shared by our panel of speakers. Your support, encouragement, and feedback keep us going. Drop a ❤️ below to help these programs reach a larger audience. As Projectkin, we’re hooked on family history stories. So often, these stories start with the stuff left for us by our ancestors. In Kathy’s Corner, it helps us sort through and make sense of our collections of photographs, documents, and other artifacts. Her decades of experience as a professional photo organizer give her special insight into the field. See upcoming events here. Did a friend share this post? Fantastic! Learn more about Projectkin and join our community of family historians hooked on stories. Projectkin.org/about. Postcards and their stories has been in the background of many of our programs here at Kathy’s Corner. For this final episode for 2025, we invited a half-dozen friends, members, and a cousin to join us to share their stories. This resulted in a joyful celebration of the visual stories we discover these precious artifacts. The discussion was so compelling you can expect more programs to touch on related topics in the weeks and months to come. Have an idea for a future episode? Drop Kathy a note: Our Speakers & Their Postcards Jill Swenson Jill has written a book that is coming out next June about the place where her Swedish immigrant great-grandparents homesteaded on ceded Red Lake Reservation land in northern Minnesota in 1903. Since 1968 when Jill purchased a picture postcard of Kakaygeesick, the Ojibway spiritual leader she met as a 10-year-old visiting relatives there, Jill has collected postcards and she is here to talk about her newest acquisition: an image of her great-grandmother’s sister at her spinning wheel from 1913 Contact Details * Jill Swenson on Substack Linda Teather Linda is a long time supporter of Projectkin and Kathy’s Corner, from Calgary, Alberta. She has done photo projects with her family archives. Her Postcards were found by Barbara’s niece, Pua Lemelle in a Thrift Shop in Portland Oregon, and we shared them on a Kathy’s Corner. Linda jumped in and did some research on the postcards Contact Details * Linda Teather on Substack Mary Marshall Dr. Mary M. Marshall, a retired educator, is the founder/curator of “Dr. Mary Marshall’s Collection.” Her interest in postcards began when she found a collection of postcards and letters in her ancestral home, and from having a sizable number of postcards returned to her after they were found in an antique store. In addition to the slide of her postcards, Mary also wanted to share this video she recorded to express her gratitude to the person who returned her postcards: Contact Details * Dr. Mary M. Marshall on Substack Ellen Thompson Ellen has been doing genealogy since she was a teen when she interviewed her great grandmother. One of the postcards that she is sharing today is one that belonged to that great grandmother Contact Details * Family History Hound Notebook on Substack on the web or on YouTube Jayme Blenkarn Jayme is Edmonton, Alberta. Her interest in Postcards came via her unintentionally ending up with possession of many family albums.... from multiple families....100+ years of history from her complicated but amazing family tree. Paired with her interest in Genealogy, These Postcards help connect her to her roots but also help her tie together the details of her own life journal. The stories written between the lines on the backs of these cards tell here more about the people she lost than she expected. They help put a few more puzzle pieces together. Contact Details * JayB64 on Substack Paula Collins Paula is from NE Florida. Genealogy is one of her hobbies. Her postcards bring back memories of the family trips she had over her time growing up, and items that she had seen or known about through her father. The times of going to flea markets and antique shows of him looking through postcard boxes and shadow boxes for items he collected, including Depression Glass, Campbell Soup Ornaments and Royal Dolton. Contact Details * Paula Collins on Substack History & Other Resources From Mary Marshall * The Dr. Mary Marshall Collection is accessible at Emory University: archives.libraries.emory.edu/repositories/7/resources/3057 When you go to this link or put Mary Marshall +Emory University in search bar, and you’ll see other links that show some specific photos from the collection. From Jayme Blenkarn * A deltiologist is a person who collects and studies picture postcards. The hobby is called deltiology, and it is one of the world’s largest collecting hobbies. Collectors are drawn to postcards for various reasons, such as interest in history, art, or specific subjects like a particular city, building, or even historical events. www.joycetice.com/johnson/catalog/rppc.html * Stanley Johnson Exaggerated Postcards * postcardhistory.net/2020/08/a-look-at-leather-postcards/ * glamourforgrandmothers.com/a-leather-postcard-romance/ From Paula Collins: A person with many hobbies can be called a Multipotentialite, a term for someone with diverse interests, or a Polymath, someone skilled in many fields * University of Maryland Libraries www.lib.umd.edu/institute-american-deltiology The Institute was established to act as library, gallery and research center for the study of postcards and North American history and culture. From Jennifer Jones: * Postcards remind me of how wonderful it would be to see business cards through the years. We had many different ones and in the 80s they were postcard size. I’d love to still have them. Other Referenced Posts Joining us in the audience today was Jane Chapman, whom many of you will know for her Substack, BJNL’s Genealogy. Her ongoing series of posts “From the Treasure Box” detailing the contents of an old suitcase her husband inherited filled with photos, postcards and other family-related items. Explore the series of posts here. To learn more about the history of postcards and other resources, please see our Live program earlier this week: About Kathy Stone and Kathy’s Coaching As Projectkin, we’re here to help families tell their stories in any form. I feel strongly that our collections of photos and other artifacts are key to our memories and, in turn, our stories. Have a friend who may benefit from this? Please share it and invite them to join us, Get full access to Projectkin at projectkin.substack.com/subscribe

    1h 2m
  4. 10/24/2025

    Kathy’s Corner » Metadata and Other Strategies with Guest Maureen Taylor » October 2025

    Thank you, Bill Moore, Cynthia Boatright Raleigh, Faith Van Wart, Lynda HeinesLinda Teather, and so many more for joining us today. Your support, encouragement, and feedback keep us going. Drop a ❤️ below to help these programs reach a larger audience. As Projectkin, we’re hooked on family history stories. So often, these stories start with the stuff left for us by our ancestors. In Kathy’s Corner, it helps us sort through and make sense of our collections of photographs, documents, and other artifacts. Her decades of experience as a professional photo organizer give her special insight into the field. See upcoming events here. Did a friend share this post? Fantastic! Learn more about Projectkin and join our community of family historians hooked on stories. Projectkin.org/about. We were delighted to welcome Maureen Taylor as our special guest. As a former curator at a historical society, Maureen knows how to make sense of photographs and family history. As she puts it, her skills are at the junction of history, genealogy, and photography. You can follow Maureen on her YouTube channel here. Kathy referenced just two of her many well-known books; you’ll find more books, courses, and tools on her website. * Preserving Your Family Photographs * Family Photo Detective 2023 Maureen’s talents make her the perfect person to discuss metadata, a long-time challenge for genealogists and photo organizers. Today’s discussions covered a range of topics from * A basic introduction to the term and its history in photography. * The conflict between the metadata use case for genealogists and the privacy exposure it creates for use in social media. Resources Mentioned Maureen’s posts & publications * Metadata playlist on YouTube Organizations & specifications * The International Press Telecommunications Council — IPTC.org * Photo Metadata IPTC Standard * Exchangeable Image File Format (EXIF) Family summary from the US Library of Congress Tools and platforms that leverage image metadata for genealogists * Vivid-Pix * Adobe Bridge * Mylio * Forever Platforms for comparing images without the use of metadata * From Google * Images.Google.com (drag-and-drop image file to search) * Google Lens (works in Chrome and Google Photos mobile app) * Tineye.com Privacy Issue in Image Metadata A summary of privacy concerns when data is included with images shared on social media has spawned a series of platforms to strip metadata from images. There are a variety of these tools online, including Metadata2go, and PrivacyStrip, to name just two. Learn more about Kathy’s Coaching. As Projectkin, we’re here to help families tell their stories in any form. I feel strongly that our collections of photos and other artifacts are key to our memories and, in turn, our stories. Have a friend who may benefit from this? Please share it and invite them to join us, Date change: Our usual date for Kathy’s Corner in November coincides with American Thanksgiving. A month later, it lands on Christmas Day. To work around that, we’ll combine our November and December programs into a special Kathy’s Corner event on December 5. Our program on December 4th will be a special interactive program titled “Postcards: Pictures, Stories, Art, and History.” Bring your postcard and story, and tell us about it! If you can bring a postcard, please let Kathy know so she can adjust our timing so everyone can participate. Get full access to Projectkin at projectkin.substack.com/subscribe

    1h 6m
  5. 09/26/2025

    Kathy’s Corner » Handling Damaged Photos » September 2025

    Thank you, Bill Moore , Linda Teather, Erin Hoover, Jennifer Jones, Anne Matuszak and so many more for joining us today. Today we enjoyed a lively conversation after Kathy’s presentation, including the contribution of two sample photos by Anne Matuszak, see below. As Projectkin, we’re hooked on family history stories. So often, these stories start with the stuff left for us by our ancestors. In Kathy’s Corner, Projectkin contributor Kathy Stone, helps us sort through and make sense of these materials with insights from her decades of professional photo organizer experience. Explore our calendar for upcoming events here. Was this post shared with you? Fantastic! Learn more about Projectkin and join our community of family historians hooked on stories. Projectkin.org/about. Notes Disaster does strike; we know it will; we just don’t know when and where. In today’s tactical episode, Kathy takes us through the gritty work of handling those damaged photos and artifacts. Safety First! Kathy mixes her guidance on handling the photos with tips on personal hazards like * Mold (or Mould) * Unknown chemicals * Fire residue You may not know what to expect, but you can be prepared. Kathy’s offered suggestions for the kinds of things your might want to set aside in a Recovery Kit: * Freezer Bags for wet, but clean photos you can’t handle yet. * Wax or parchment paper to place objects to dry without risk of sticking. * Marker and paper for notes, such as to associate photos with envelopes. * A knife or boxcutter to disassemble an album. * Gloves to protect yourself from mold or unknown chemicals. * Breathing mask (N95 or respirator) to protect yourself from mold and fetid material from floods or other disasters. A special guest of Kathy’s, Anne Matuszak shared two interesting photos during the session that helped illustrate both the damage that can occur: To illustrate a drying technique using an ad hoc clothes line method built from ladders, Anne shared this example: Resources * What to Do When Disaster Strikes Your Photos by Kathy Stone * How to Remove Your Pictures from Magnetic Photo Albums by Good Life Photo Solutions • goodlifephotosolutions.com/magnetic-photo-albums * Multi-Purpose Tool for handling photos creativememories.ca/multi-purpose-tool.html * Flattening Curled Photos by Chaos to Memories * Photo Tutorial: How to Relax and Rehumidify Old Rolled Photographs and Documents by the Family Curator • thefamilycurator.com/photo-tutorial-how-to-relax-and-rehumidify-old-rolled-photog * I Have Smelly Family Photos. Now What? By Familytree Magazine familytreemagazine.com/preservation/photos-preservation/smelly-family-photos As Projectkin, we’re here to help families tell their stories, in any form. I feel strongly that our collections of photos and other artifacts are key to our memories and, in turn, our stories. If you know someone who may benefit from Kathy’s presentation, please do share it and invite them to join us in this community. As you explore this episode, you may also want to explore the many posts on Kathy’s own publication, Kathy's Coaching. Get full access to Projectkin at projectkin.substack.com/subscribe

    1h 2m
  6. Kathy’s Corner » Terminology of Photo Organizing » August 2025

    08/29/2025

    Kathy’s Corner » Terminology of Photo Organizing » August 2025

    Thank you Bill Moore, Linda Teather, Marci Keats Rudolph 🇨🇦, Erin Hoover and so many more for joining us today. As Projectkin, we’re hooked on family history stories. So often, these stories start with the stuff left for us by our ancestors. In Kathy’s Corner, Projectkin contributor Kathy Stone, helps us sort through and make sense of these materials with insights learned in her decades of experience as a professional photo organizer. Explore our calendar for coming events here. Was this post shared with you? Join us and get this and all of our program recordings directly in your inbox! Projectkin.org/about For many of us, handling personal archives is tricky. Not only do we have to keep track of those endless utilitarian photos, we’re also master archivists for our extended family. To sort through all of that, you now have the company of friends (Projectkin) and the expertise of a pro, Kathy Stone. Today, Kathy walked us through the simple terms you’ll often hear tossed around with an assumption that we all know what we’re talking about. Well… that’s not always true — and we often have slightly different meanings for the terms we use. The goal here isn’t to agree on the terms, necessarily. Instead, we want to help you understand how the terms are used to ensure that you can plan a workflow for your own materials. At the end of the day, the most important thing is that you never lose these precious archives. It’s also pretty nice when you can find exactly what you’re looking for when you need it. In this recording, Kathy’s asked questions like: * Should you Sync a Legacy collection? * How much should be in a Legacy Collection? You’ll see that the answers to these questions are not always as straightforward as you might think. In the recording, Kathy mentioned an example of a Legacy Collection - this one is public: * forever.com/app/users/john-a-jack-snyder Legacy and archive may have subtle differences that matter in how they’re used by backup and sync are by no means the same. Kathy’s recommended this article as background: * proton.me/blog/backup-vs-sync She also talked about the classic mnemonic: The ABC's of Photo Organizing: A—Album, B—Box, C—Can (trash), and S—Stories. Here’s The Photo Managers articulation of the strategy: * thephotomanagers.com/the-abcs-of-photo-organizing Finally, Kathy referenced Ann Larkham of Photogenealogy and the approach she’s used for these terms. Here’s a summary she shared as a pdf: * Ann Larkham’s Photogenealogy Terminology As a tip to next month’s focus Kathy is actively participating in The Photo Managers annual Save Your Photos Month. As part of that program, Kathy has shared her affiliate link to their programming, most of which is entirely free during the month of September. * thephotomanagers.ontralink.com/t?orid=557&opid=43 Do you have questions for Kathy or other members of the community, drop them in the chat below and let’s keep this conversation going. I know I have a good idea for an archiving project I should have done a while ago. 🤭 No time like the present! Get full access to Projectkin at projectkin.substack.com/subscribe

    1h 5m
  7. 07/25/2025

    Kathy’s Corner » Handling the “Overwhelm” » July 2025

    As Projectkin, we’re hooked on family history stories. So often, these stories start with the stuff left for us by our ancestors. In Kathy’s Corner, Projectkin contributor Kathy Stone, helps us sort through and make sense of these materials with insights learned in her decades of experience as a professional photo organizer. Explore our calendar for coming events here. Was this shared with you? Welcome! Learn more about our community at Projectkin.org/about. Then, join us! Managing expectations can be the key to sticking with your goals of organizing and maintaining your family photo collection. Today’s lively and wide-ranging conversation included: * Projects vs. Operational Discipline (perhaps a program or process). * How to manage projects delivered in digital form. * How a digital archive such as WeAre.xyz might differ from a photo archive. * How terms can vary and why you want to be very clear about how you’re handling: * Your personal photo backups (such as from your mobile devices) * Your scanned photo collection and how they are backed up, archived, and flow through notations for correcting dates, edits, or metadata * A hub of your photos and how that’s backed up and archived * Completed projects are archived * How a family legacy collection might differ from your photo collection. Kathy also shared a few tools she’s been using in a section we called “Kathy’s Confessions” 😉 * The “where you are on your projects” survey that Kathy mentioned from her publication: * Kathy’s Google Sheet with tabs to help manage the stages of a scanning project. (That’s free for you to use.) As you explore this episode, you may also find Kathy’s notable post Many thanks to our active participants today, including Ann Larkham, Linda Teather, Jane Chapman, and Bill Moore among others. Your contributions added to the richness of today’s conversation, thank you. Get full access to Projectkin at projectkin.substack.com/subscribe

    1h 3m
  8. Kathy’s Corner » Copyright & Materials Acquired From Others » June 2025

    06/27/2025

    Kathy’s Corner » Copyright & Materials Acquired From Others » June 2025

    As Projectkin, we’re hooked on family history stories. So often, these stories start with the artifacts, documents, and photographs left for us by our ancestors. In Kathy’s Corner, Projectkin contributor Kathy Stone, helps us sort through and make sense of these materials with insights learned in her decades of experience as a professional photo organizer. Explore our calendar for coming events here. If this was shared with you, why not join our free community? Learn more at Projectkin.org/about. Today, Kathy dove into some of the most basic challenges of our artifact collections: acquiring the photos and using the ones in our possession. We may own the physical prints or digital files, but do we have the copyright? If we don’t know who does, how do we get permission? Today’s episode builds on a tip for Mission: Genealogy, by Deborah Carl“Copyright and Images.” (You’ll find a long list of resources in that post and more tips in this series at MissionGenealogy.org/tips). During her talk, Kathy Stone referenced numerous external articles and legal summaries, including: Copyright Laws by Country * United Kingdom — legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1988/48/contents * Canada — laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/C-42/Index.html * United States — copyright.gov/title17 * New Zealand — legislation.govt.nz/act/public/1994/0143/latest/DLM345634.html * Australia — legislation.gov.au/C1968A00063/2019-01-01/text Electronic Frontier Foundation: Advocacy * Fair Use Topics — eff.org/issues/intellectual-property * “The Public Domain Is the Rule, Copyright Is the Exception” — eff.org/deeplinks/2020/01/public-domain-rule-copyright-exception OrganizingPhotos.Net * “Can I Scan that Photo – Legally? Understanding Copyright and Fair Use” by Jackie Jade — Organizingphotos.net/scan-photo-legally-copyright-fair-use The Legal Genealogist on Copyright * LegalGenealogist.com/category/copyright * “Copyright and the old family photo” — LegalGenealogist.com/2012/03/06/copyright-and-the-old-family-photo * “Copyright and the genealogy lecture” — bit.ly/4loa578 Open Media * “The Shrӧdigner’s cat of copyright: What is an ‘orphan work’”— bit.ly/4kWQr2b Wilders & Co, Content Management Systems * “Who Cares About Copyright Infringement Laws” by Regan Wilders — linkedin.com/pulse/who-cares-copyright-infringement-laws-regan-wilders Langara College Library * “Copyright for Photography” — langara.libguides.com/copyright-for-photography/canada Get full access to Projectkin at projectkin.substack.com/subscribe

    1h 7m

About

Archives of our Kathy's Corner events. These remarkable events bring you the expert advice of a professional archivist and photo manager as she tackles her own collection. To learn more about the next Kathy's Corner events scheduled, see Projectkin.org/events. Available now as both recordings and audio streams in your favorite podcast player. projectkin.substack.com