Curating Family Photos with Martie McNabb

Mar 21, 2022 | 0 comments

Have you inherited your family’s photo collection? Is it overwhelming your life? What can you do to manage these photos, and how do you deal with the emotional baggage tied to all these things?

Martie McNabb, a personal historian and founder of Show & Tales and Memories Out of the Box, has helped hundreds of people deal with these issues. In this video interview, she encourages people to have hope when dealing with an overwhelming task.

Curating Family Photos with Martie McNabb

Managing the Memories

Photos in boxes“It’s sentimental, it’s memories, it’s the stories that people get deeply attached to,” said McNabb. “You can’t keep a house full of stuff, and you can’t keep every photo for multiple generations. What will you do with it for the future as well?”

“I encourage people to make choices, just like a museum or a documentary film maker ends up curating what they keep…. That stuff that you let go of, at the very least, you can have a photo or make a video, or even make a book about these objects, saving and sharing the story while letting the physical clutter go.”

It can be too much to focus on details at the very beginning. Set up three boxes:

  • A “Keep” box, for those items you absolutely must keep;
  • A “Maybe” box, if you don’t know for sure but think the photos might be important;
  • And a “Toss” box, for multiple duplicates of photos, blurry images, and unremarkable landscape pictures.

Photo Curating Tips

Here are some key takeaway points from the video conversation with Gail Rubin, The Doyenne of Death®.

  • To help pare down what you keep, save three to five of the best pictures from trips and special events.
  • Organize the “Keepers” chronologically. “We all think, compare, and understand our lives chronologically, generally speaking,” said McNabb. “Don’t get into ‘Is this 1955 or 1956?’ An era range is fine.”
  • Scanning is not the answer to everything. It can be expensive and time-consuming. Ask who are these for? Who’s the audience? Who’s going to inherit them? Who’s going to appreciate this?
  • You can recycle albums that have no personal information like names, birthdates, anything that could be used for identity theft. Shred items with personal details.
  • Old yearbooks can be sent to alumni associations for universities or schools. Sometimes small historical societies, museums or libraries might want them.
  • There’s an app for scanning photos! Check into Photomyne.com.

Photo managers, professionals who can you help tackle what can be a seemingly enormous task, can be hired to get the job done. Martie McNabb can answer your questions about managing your family photos. Contact her by email: Martie@MemoriesOutOfTheBox.com.

Gail Rubin, Certified Thanatologist and The Doyenne of Death®, is an award-winning speaker, author, and coordinator of the Before I Die New Mexico Festival (www.BeforeIDieNM.com). Her book, Kicking the Bucket List: 100 Downsizing and Organizing Things to Do Before You Die, is available through her website, www.AGoodGoodbye.com.

 

A Good Goodbye