Dear everyone.
I am in possession of a book, "The University of Glasgow Old and New". (Partial details: http://special.lib.gla.ac.uk/exhibns/month/july2008.html). My copy is #22 of 50, I believe there was also a cheaper edition of 150 or 250. I really want to make this available to Wikipedia, but need help: The book is relatively tightly bound, and the spine gets in the way of the scanner. I need someone with either a scanner that doesn't have a one-inch bit of plastic between the scanner bed and the edge of the scanner, thus cutting off the photos, or a photographer able to take high-quality photos of the photos.
I would also like to donate copies of some very large (A0 and A1) medical posters, from the series "Supplement to the Anatomy of Labour". These are a bit delicate, though not ridiculously so, but I'd be uncomfortable running them through a strip scanner. If someone has a sufficiently large flatbed, or can take photos of them, let's do this.
Please help, I've been trying to get these to Wikipedia for 6 months now.
Thank you, Adam Cuerden
On Wed, Aug 6, 2008 at 2:12 AM, Adam Cuerden cuerden@gmail.com wrote:
Dear everyone.
I am in possession of a book, "The University of Glasgow Old and New". (Partial details: http://special.lib.gla.ac.uk/exhibns/month/july2008.html ). My copy is #22 of 50, I believe there was also a cheaper edition of 150 or 250. I really want to make this available to Wikipedia, but need help: The book is relatively tightly bound, and the spine gets in the way of the scanner. I need someone with either a scanner that doesn't have a one-inch bit of plastic between the scanner bed and the edge of the scanner, thus cutting off the photos, or a photographer able to take high-quality photos of the photos.
I would also like to donate copies of some very large (A0 and A1) medical posters, from the series "Supplement to the Anatomy of Labour". These are a bit delicate, though not ridiculously so, but I'd be uncomfortable running them through a strip scanner. If someone has a sufficiently large flatbed, or can take photos of them, let's do this.
Please help, I've been trying to get these to Wikipedia for 6 months now.
It would be great to see these on commons & wikisource; maybe a university library will have the facilities you need. It might be useful to ask at the en.wp Librarians WikiProject.
Once you have the images, Wikisource people can help you bundle them into "djvu" files ready for OCR/transcription and proofreading.
e.g.
http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Index:Distinguished_Churchmen.djvu http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Index:A_Treatise_on_Electricity_and_Magnetism_...
-- John
On Wed, Aug 6, 2008 at 11:26 AM, John Vandenberg jayvdb@gmail.com wrote:
It would be great to see these on commons & wikisource; maybe a university library will have the facilities you need. It might be useful to ask at the en.wp Librarians WikiProject.
Yes, they may well be able to point you in the direction of one of those book scanners with the cradle to eliminate the need to open the book all the way out. This kind of thing:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:V-shaped-cradle.jpg
Dear Adam,
You don't mention where you live. I am guessing near Glasgow from the material you mention, but that is just a guess. Your location might be important in finding someone who can help you scan/photograph the materials without having to ship them.
Best, John
On Tue, Aug 5, 2008 at 9:12 AM, Adam Cuerden cuerden@gmail.com wrote:
Dear everyone.
I am in possession of a book, "The University of Glasgow Old and New". (Partial details: http://special.lib.gla.ac.uk/exhibns/month/july2008.html). My copy is #22 of 50, I believe there was also a cheaper edition of 150 or 250. I really want to make this available to Wikipedia, but need help: The book is relatively tightly bound, and the spine gets in the way of the scanner. I need someone with either a scanner that doesn't have a one-inch bit of plastic between the scanner bed and the edge of the scanner, thus cutting off the photos, or a photographer able to take high-quality photos of the photos.
I would also like to donate copies of some very large (A0 and A1) medical posters, from the series "Supplement to the Anatomy of Labour". These are a bit delicate, though not ridiculously so, but I'd be uncomfortable running them through a strip scanner. If someone has a sufficiently large flatbed, or can take photos of them, let's do this.
Please help, I've been trying to get these to Wikipedia for 6 months now.
Thank you, Adam Cuerden
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