Hello, I'm Daryl one
of the Heritage Project volunteers.
Having recently been on the blogging workshop, offered to us by the
Winter's Heritage Project, I thought I'd take the plunge and tell you about my
experience of my half day conservation sessions at Winters.
I had done my half
day of glass negative conservation a few weeks ago, but I was lucky enough to
have the opportunity to volunteer for a second half day yesterday.
Being the second
time (third if you count the Open Day) that I had been behind the scenes at W W
Winter I felt a bit more at home.
I was working again
with another volunteer that I had met at the Conservation Workshop in January
which helped. We had also been on the
previous cleaning session together and at the blogging workshop.
We were directed to
a back room on this occasion to address some 12 inch by 10 inch glass
negatives. Previously I had worked in
the newly refurbished room on 3 inch by 4 inch negatives. On that previous occasion we had not managed
to process very many as it was our first visit, but this time we got through quite a few more.
During
a break Louisa showed us some images from larger negatives that she had
digitised by taking digital photos of them.
Unfortunately many of them were beyond recovery, but not all. The images often of only part of the original
were fascinating. Although I have to
admit to being more interested in the machines and buildings than the people,
but that's just me.
There was a great
image of what seemed to be a Foden Steam Lorry; our cursory web search
suggested that it would have been between 1906 and 1911, over one hundred years
ago ! Unfortunately our web search
turned up nothing about the company painted on the lorry door
"Spa". The lorry was loaded
with what looked to me like wooden crates which could have been beer or pop or
could it have been "mineral water".
Was there a market for mineral water 100 years ago ? I don't know, but I'm sure someone out there
will :D
Back at the job we
were there to do we cleaned and stored some images of Repton School Hockey
Team, several wedding images, a couple of a workshop with belt driven lathes in
operation and a company motor coach outing.
It was all over very
quickly and since we are almost at the end of the first phase there were no
further scheduled conservation sessions available. I will have to wait and see what the next
phase brings.
*Editors Note: We found a few Spa~Water bottles in the glass hole in the cellar. Spa-Tona (formerly Spa-Iron Brew) was a drink produced by Burrows & Sturgess of Derby. Hubert thinks we did commercial photography for them - hence the 'still full' bottles seen in this photo!
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