If new objects are added to a collection already submitted for inclusion,
assign numbers to new items following the end of the numbers
already assigned; do not worry about gaps.
An image description form (pink) is filled out for each image
by the archivist who assembles the objects. The pink form is placed
on top of its corresponding photo or manuscript, when possible, folded
over and closed with an archival paper clip. The
pink form is kept with the until returned to the collection or owning
repositories.
Give selected objects to digital technician for scanning.
To avoid duplication during the scanning and cataloging process,
digital technicians should work on separate collections.
TIFFs are uploaded to the appropriate TIFF image folder on server.
JPEGs are uploaded to the appropriate "JPEG to upload" folder
on server.
Cataloging on Acquisition Station
JPEG images are imported to Acquisition Station software
to create a record for each object. The records are created using
a custom template approved by the project manager (Mary).
Applicable metadata fields not in the template are input.
Records are temporarily stored on the local workstation. It may
useful to accumulate a small number (10-20) of records locally so
as the technician becomes more familiar with the collection, the
metadata vocabulary can be normalized as appropriate.
Log the file name
of each JPEG file included in a record.
Once a set of records is complete, the records are uploaded for
approval by the project manager (Mary) through the administrative
module.
Send the project manager (Mary) a copy of the log of JPEG files
used.
Add Records to Digital Collection
Project Manager adds records, and as necessary, new controlled
vocabulary to the Digital Collection.
Completion Steps
Once the records have been successfully uploaded and reviewed,
return the material to the appropriate collection or repository
Naming Conventions for the TIFF and JPEG files.
Each image will be saved in TIFF format for archival purposes and converted
to JPEG format for database presentation. The TIFF and JPEG versions
will have the same name with only the extension to distinguish them.
Each
file name will be in the form of an acronym for
the repository or the collection name within the Oviatt library's holdings,
plus a two or three-digit extension, beginning with 01 or 001, depending
on how many objects are being selected from the source collection or repository
(e.g. ACC02.jpg). All the letters in the abbreviation
should be capitalized. Additional guidelines:
For text-based items, insert ms before
the numeric extension (e.g. ACCms01.jpg).
For multi-page documents, a separate number should be assigned to
each side scanned (COHSms183A.jpg, COHSms183B.jpg, COHSms183C.jpg,
etc.)
Photos in the University Archives Photograph Collections should be named using the code UA and then a FIVE-digit number (if available -- e.g. UA00382). Slides in the collection should be named using the code UAs and then the number.
Items scanned for the "In Our Own Backyard" collection should be named using the accession number and a page number suffix if necessary (p01, 0p2, etc.).
The name of
the institution that owns the image will be recorded in the DCRepository
Element field with any accession number that might exist. Most of the collections
outside of the CSUN archives and special collections do not have formal
collection names and accession numbers. The abbreviation will be established
at the start of scanning workflow.