this post was submitted on 26 Oct 2023
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Photography

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This is not a good place to simply share cool photos/videos or promote your own work and projects, but rather a place to discuss photography as an art and post things that would be of interest to other photographers.

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My father-in-law was a professional film editor. As you can imagine, his photos are excellent. He taught classes for many years, won contests, and gave travel talks at the libraries in the area.

My husband (also a semi-professional photographer) took all his film, slides and scans when he died, with the intent to sort it and find a home for things. Unfortunately, my husband passed away only a few years after his dad. I am left with an entire bedroom full of prints, slides, negatives and digitized media.

I'd like to do the right thing with it. My lovely FIL traveled the globe and shot images everywhere. However, I know that his pictures of Cambodia are probably like anyone else's pictures.

Should I throw it all away? Are there stock photo houses that would like it? I'm not looking to make money (although I wouldn't turn it down if offered). I'd just like to see his life's work go somewhere. There is only one brother and he has no interest in any of it.

Advice?

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[–] SEO_Vampire@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

There are archives and museums or other national organisations that can curate the images and (if you want) make them available under creative commons licenses or similar. Then people can see and use them (but not for commercial purposes).
(May be used for decorations in public spaces and the like, happened to a friends images he donated)

If you're from the US contact National Archives to donate them. But almost every country has something similar where they can help you.

Also there are certainly organisations on local levels that would probably love them for the same reason but also for local history documentation.