Conservation Documentation and the Implications of Digitisation

<p class="up_abstract-text">Conservation documentation can be defined as the textual and visual records collected during the care and treatment of an object. It can include records of the object's condition, any treatment done to the object, any observations or conclusions made...

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Main Author: Michelle Moore
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2001-11-01
Series:Journal of Conservation and Museum Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.jcms-journal.com/articles/20
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spelling doaj-05bde32b69f84f138e17e0ef13ade7152020-11-24T23:23:50ZengUbiquity PressJournal of Conservation and Museum Studies2049-45721364-04292001-11-01761010.5334/jcms.701220Conservation Documentation and the Implications of DigitisationMichelle Moore0University College London<p class="up_abstract-text">Conservation documentation can be defined as the textual and visual records collected during the care and treatment of an object. It can include records of the object's condition, any treatment done to the object, any observations or conclusions made by the conservator as well as details on the object's past and present environment. The form of documentation is not universally agreed upon nor has it always been considered an important aspect of the conservation profession. Good documentation tells the complete story of an object thus far and should provide as much information as possible for the future researcher, curator, or conservator. <p class="up_abstract-text">The conservation profession will benefit from digitising its documentation using software such as databases and hardware like digital cameras and scanners. Digital technology will make conservation documentation more easily accessible, cost/time efficient, and will increase consistency and accuracy of the recorded data, and reduce physical storage space requirements. The major drawback to digitising conservation records is maintaining access to the information for the future; the notorious pace of technological change has serious implications for retrieving data from any machine- readable medium.http://www.jcms-journal.com/articles/20documentationdigitisation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michelle Moore
spellingShingle Michelle Moore
Conservation Documentation and the Implications of Digitisation
Journal of Conservation and Museum Studies
documentation
digitisation
author_facet Michelle Moore
author_sort Michelle Moore
title Conservation Documentation and the Implications of Digitisation
title_short Conservation Documentation and the Implications of Digitisation
title_full Conservation Documentation and the Implications of Digitisation
title_fullStr Conservation Documentation and the Implications of Digitisation
title_full_unstemmed Conservation Documentation and the Implications of Digitisation
title_sort conservation documentation and the implications of digitisation
publisher Ubiquity Press
series Journal of Conservation and Museum Studies
issn 2049-4572
1364-0429
publishDate 2001-11-01
description <p class="up_abstract-text">Conservation documentation can be defined as the textual and visual records collected during the care and treatment of an object. It can include records of the object's condition, any treatment done to the object, any observations or conclusions made by the conservator as well as details on the object's past and present environment. The form of documentation is not universally agreed upon nor has it always been considered an important aspect of the conservation profession. Good documentation tells the complete story of an object thus far and should provide as much information as possible for the future researcher, curator, or conservator. <p class="up_abstract-text">The conservation profession will benefit from digitising its documentation using software such as databases and hardware like digital cameras and scanners. Digital technology will make conservation documentation more easily accessible, cost/time efficient, and will increase consistency and accuracy of the recorded data, and reduce physical storage space requirements. The major drawback to digitising conservation records is maintaining access to the information for the future; the notorious pace of technological change has serious implications for retrieving data from any machine- readable medium.
topic documentation
digitisation
url http://www.jcms-journal.com/articles/20
work_keys_str_mv AT michellemoore conservationdocumentationandtheimplicationsofdigitisation
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