Wednesday, 9 October 2013
Royal College of Art
Max are very happy to have recently completed work for the Royal College of Art.
Saturday, 21 September 2013
Monday, 22 July 2013
Richmal Crompton
The Richmal Crompton Collection was transferred to the University of Roehampton as a deposit by the Literary Estate of Richmal Crompton Lamburn in late 2007 with an opening in January 2008. It comprises of all her belongings associated with her as a writer but also private life such as material concerning her education or correspondence with family members and friends, and diaries. Of course there is a rich collection of manuscripts, drafts, jottings, radio plays, correspondence with fans and publishers (continuing after her death), press cuttings and of course photographs, etc. The collection also holds her private library, and last but not least her publications, namely Just William books in numerous editions and translations as well as her lesser known adult fiction.
Max are delighted to be digitising this fantastic collection.
The longitude problem: 300-year-old archive opened to the world.
It was the conundrum that baffled some of the greatest and most
eccentric experts of the 18th century - and captivated the British
public during an era of unprecedented scientific and technical
transformation.
Now, for the first time, the full story of attempts to solve the longitude problem - unravelling the lone genius myth popularised in film and literature - is freely available to everyone via the Cambridge Digital Library at http://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/
The new Board of Longitude Collection includes the complete archive of the Board, held by the Library, along with associated collections from the National Maritime Museum. Treasures of the Longitude archive include accounts of bitter rivalries, wild proposals and first encounters between Europeans and Pacific peoples. This includes logbooks of Captain Cook’s voyages of discovery, the naming of Australia and even a letter from Captain Bligh of HMS Bounty, who writes to apologise for the loss of a timekeeper after his ship was ‘pirated from my command’.
The University Library’s Digital Library project was launched in June 2010 following a £1.5m gift from the Polonsky Foundation. University Librarian Anne Jarvis said: “With the digitisation of this incredible collection, we have taken another important step towards realising our shared ambition of creating a digital library for the world.”
Max worked onsite at the National Maritime Museum digitising 32,000 pages.
Now, for the first time, the full story of attempts to solve the longitude problem - unravelling the lone genius myth popularised in film and literature - is freely available to everyone via the Cambridge Digital Library at http://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/
The new Board of Longitude Collection includes the complete archive of the Board, held by the Library, along with associated collections from the National Maritime Museum. Treasures of the Longitude archive include accounts of bitter rivalries, wild proposals and first encounters between Europeans and Pacific peoples. This includes logbooks of Captain Cook’s voyages of discovery, the naming of Australia and even a letter from Captain Bligh of HMS Bounty, who writes to apologise for the loss of a timekeeper after his ship was ‘pirated from my command’.
The University Library’s Digital Library project was launched in June 2010 following a £1.5m gift from the Polonsky Foundation. University Librarian Anne Jarvis said: “With the digitisation of this incredible collection, we have taken another important step towards realising our shared ambition of creating a digital library for the world.”
Max worked onsite at the National Maritime Museum digitising 32,000 pages.
Wednesday, 10 July 2013
Page turning
Max now brings you the ability to read your scanned books, magazines, newspapers online, just like you were reading the real thing with page turning technology. Please click the following link to see an example of such a procedure:
'A Statement Regarding Sarawak'
Tuesday, 9 July 2013
Altar Piece
Crucifixion with Saints, 1348 - Daddi, Bernardo
Tempera on panel, integral frame gabled top.
The altar piece was donated by Courthauld Images, The Courthauld Gallery.
The altar piece was donated by Courthauld Images, The Courthauld Gallery.
Max printed the altar piece, the image of which was supplied by the Courthauld Institute, directly on to Foamex board which is lightweight for use but very strong. The image was then cut out to replicate the original 14th century Altar piece, for Priory Church of St Bartholomew the Great, West Smithfield, London.
Saint Bartholomew the Great is one of London's oldest churches. Founded in 1123 as an Augustinian Priory, built when Henry I, son of William the Conqueror, was King. It survived the Great Fire of 1666 and both World Wars unscathed. Today the Church, which is well worth a visit, has appeared in numerous films including Four Weddings and a Funeral, Shakespeare in Love, Amazing Grace,Elizabeth: The Golden Age, and The Other Boleyn Girl, as well as in numerous television programmes, including The Hollow Crown.
Monday, 13 May 2013
3D Photography - A new service from Max
At Max we constantly strive to provide innovative and exciting services for the Culture and Heritage Sector. One of the latest services we can now provide is the three dimensional imaging of stills objects (3d photography)
Here is a link to an example of this service
http://www.maxcommunications.co.uk/object/watchb/index.html
Here is a link to an example of this service
http://www.maxcommunications.co.uk/object/watchb/index.html
Thursday, 2 May 2013
Wednesday, 1 May 2013
Our customer are lovely :-)
Sue in the scanning room just about to scan one of the many Quentin Blake illustrations that we've digitised over the years for his fantastic archive :-)
Monday, 29 April 2013
'Century Chest' Time Capsule Opened In Oklahoma After 100 Years
Thursday, 25 April 2013
How safe are your digital files?
‘It is said digital documents last forever or five years, whichever comes first.’
- Jeff Rothenberg (Rand Corporation, 2001)
You’ve invested a great deal of time, energy and money into digitising your archive and now it sits on external hard drives, on your PC, “with IT” or even just on DVD’s! But digitisation is not a “do it and forget” solution. Can you be certain that files won’t go missing, become overwritten, corrupt, be attacked by viruses or that they can still be opened by software in years’ to come?
The archives community now recognises that data disaster can potentially occur to most ordinary computer systems. Some are turning to a ‘cloud based solution’ but the Achilles heel of this solution is the need to be embedded within the internet. This could lead to potential data corruption and data theft vulnerabilities, with your files sitting with thousands of others belonging to organisations outside the heritage sector that have completely different storage needs.
Max has been working with digital heritage archives for over a decade and we have a profound understanding of the requirements for digital preservation. We have now designed a new and innovative digital preservation service that will mitigate virtually all data disaster scenarios. Together with a full consultancy service, we are offering a fully resilient digital preservation solution. This service includes systematic data comparisons to ensure data integrity across multiple devices at differing geographical locations, totally off-line.
We know that price can be an issue, so we are keeping charges to a minimum with costs as low as 3p per month per gigabyte/ £30 per month per terabyte.
We are exhibiting at the Museums & Heritage Show on the 15th and 16th May at Olympia, London. Why don’t you visit our stand for a friendly chat about this new service and our other associated services? Alternatively, email me and I'll send you a free report on digital preservation - or why not do both?!
Chris George
Business Development
Max
T: 020 8309 5445
M: 07790 884050
E: chris@maxcommunications.co.uk
Tuesday, 16 April 2013
Conservation of photographic materials and restoration of damaged images
Nitrocellouse was used as a low-order explosive and was
originally known as guncotton. Nitrocellulose can be plasticized by camphor and
from the 1880’s it was used as a film base for photographs, X-ray films and
motion picture stock. This was known as nitrate film. Needless to say that
numerous fires were caused by unstable nitrate film before it was gradually
replaced by safety films based on the stable cellulose acetate film! Many large
archives of film that hold vintage photographs or motion picture stock contain
this potentially dangerous and unstable nitrate film.
We were recently commissioned by a client to carry out an
analysis of their collection and Sarah Allen our photographic materials
conservation expert identified that a significant part of the archive contained
this potentially unstable film emulsion. The advice we were able to provide
enabled the client to make special provision for this material.
Max in association with Sarah Allen has carried out several
preservation assessments for organisations such as News International, The
Government Art Collection, REME and others. Sarah graduated with an MA in the
Conservation of Historic Objects and has since worked for the Royal Albert
Memorial Museum, the National Trust and English Heritage, picking up
conservation awards along the way!
The aims of the assessments she carries out are to determine
the current condition of photographic collections and to recommend a series of
steps to ensure the long term care.
Not only can Max provide preservation reviews, we are able
to repair photographic material. Repairs can range from simple tears to more
complex treatments such as stain removal or even total restoration of
photographs that have suffered damage from cellulose triacetate degradation,
more commonly known as “Vinegar Syndrome” due to the acidic smell emitted.
Restoration of a picture that had suffered serious damage due to Vinegar Syndrome |
Sarah is shown below with a broken glass plate that was fully
restored digitally. To enable the item to be scanned effectively before
digitisation it needed to assembled (like a jigsaw puzzle) and held firmly in
place with a bespoke mask.
For further information about our Photographic Conservation
service then contact Chris
George
Computer analysis of the correspondence of King George III to throw new light on his madness?
King George III life and reign were longer than those of any previous monarch.
This reign covered the period of Great Britain defeating France in the Seven
Years War and becoming the dominant European power in North America and India;
the loss of Britain’s colonies in America in the American Revolutionary War; and concluded in
the defeat of Napoleon at the Battle of Waterloo in 1815.
Throughout his reign George III suffered from recurrent episodes of mental
illness, and in the later part of his life mental deterioration was to become
a more permanent feature. The story of his struggle with mental illness was
made into a successful 1994 film the Madness of King
George. This film depicts the relatively primitive medical practices of the
time and the effort that his doctors made in understanding the human body.
Modern medicine has suggested that the symptoms were the result of metabolic
blood disorder known as porphyria and chemical analysis of his hair have
revealed that his problems were compounded by arsenic poisoning. This arsenic
poisoning may have been as a result of the medicines prescribed to treat his
mental illness being contaminated with arsenic.
Scientists at St Georges, University of London, in collaboration
with historians in collaboration with historians from Universities of
Birmingham and Southampton, are seeking new insights into the progressive
nature of his mental illness by computer analysis of his letters. This analysis
is expected to shed new light on the time, course and duration of King George's
deteriorating mental symptoms. The research team is using detailed texts
between the King and the prime ministers of the time; these texts vary in
length from just a few lines to much longer. Letters from, before and after his
known periods of illness and derangement will be compared. The sophisticated
software used in this computational linguistics approach will identify textual
abnormalities that are seen in patients with mental illness. These include measures
of organisation and coherence in the use of language that emerge from
statistical modelling of words and sentence meaning. The work was featured in
the BBC Series “Fit to
Rule” which deals with the impact of medical conditions on the history of
Royal Households through the ages.
To enable the computers to carry out work effectively the
text must be structured in a particular way for the software to work properly.
Max was tasked with scanning many hundreds of letters from books published in
the 18th Century and then carrying out optical character recognition
of the text.
Lord North—I
am so desirous that every man in my service that can with propriety take part
in the Debate on Tuesday, should speak, that I desire You will very strongly
press Sir Gilbert Elliott and any others that have not taken in the last
Session so forward a part as their abilities make them capable of, and I have
no objection to Your adding that I have particularly directed You to speak to
them on this occasion
Max uses a sophisticated OCR system based around Abbyy
Recognition server. Despite the high levels of accuracy that we achieve
with our system it is inevitable that aberrations will occur. Once the OCR
output was created our editors carried out a proofreading to publication
service (or ‘POP’ service) to eliminate all ‘false line breaks’ extraneous
characters or remove incorrectly spelt words to create a ‘pristine’ copy of the
original text ready for inputting into the systems at St Georges University of
London.
This important study is funded by the Leverhulme Trust and will the first time that
computational linguistics techniques will be used to analyse large volumes of
correspondence dating from the 18th Century.
For information about the research project contact Dr Peter
Garrard at the Neuroscience department of St
Georges University of London
Friday, 12 April 2013
Our quality is now official!
Max is proud to announce that it is now certified as an ISO 9001:2008 Quality Management Standard compliant company.
Over the last three years Max has undergone a number of major changes including significant expansion of both personnel and services. This growth, which has led to perhaps inevitable growing pains, has made us reassess our internal communications, working practices, procedures and policies. The adoption and certification of the ISO 9001 quality management standard was a logical step for us to take, to cement what we have been aiming to achieve. Furthermore, the standard requires regular internal and independent external quality audit verification to ensure that we continue to comply.
What is ISO 9001?
ISO (International Standards Organisation) 9001 is a family of standards related to quality management systems. It is designed to help organisations ensure that they meet the needs of their customers. The certification of compliance with ISO 9001 recognises that the policies, practices and procedures of those companies ensure consistent quality in the services and products provided to clients.
What will this mean to our clients?
ISO certified processes, which are understood and applied by all our staff, will reduce the risk of production problems and so help to ensure that the services we provide will not only maintain the high standard that we have achieved to date, but will also ensure that our services can only improve over the longer term.
Wednesday, 10 April 2013
The Brooke Heritage Trust - Sarawak Photographic Album
The modern history of Sarawak, a small Malaysian state on the island of Borneo could have been dreamt up by a very imaginative script writer from Hollywood; in particular a scriptwriter that wrote exotic adventure movies!
James, Rajah of Sarawak |
Rajah Muda Hashim |
Before his death in 1868 he nominated as heir his nephew Charles Johnson (his sister’s son) a former sailor who changed his surname to Brooke upon becoming Rajah. Charles despite been a very eccentric man at home, was to become a much-loved ruler. Charles extended the boundaries of the land under his control into the interior until it was the size of England, abolished slavery and built road, waterworks and even a railway. Apparently he even encouraged his British officers to take native women as lovers.
Charles was the ruler of Sarawak for fifty years and was succeeded by his son Charles Vyner in 1917. During the reign of Charles Vyner Brooke Sarawak’s economy continued to prosper as rubber and oil production boomed. The rise in the economy enabled Charles Vyner to modernize the public service and other institutions. Brooke’s government was popular with the people and he continued to keep Christian missionaries out and foster most local traditions with the exception of head-hunting
In the 1940’s it became apparent that the Japanese Empire had ambition on the region. Sir Charles Vyner evacuated himself and family to Australia and this was just as well, because on December 25th, 1941 the Japanese invaded. The Rajah remained in exile in Sydney for the duration of the war. Eventually Australian troops liberated Sarawak in September of 1945 and Sir Charles Vyner returned to Kuching in April 1946. Unfortunately his tenure as Rajah was near to the end, and he ceded Sarawak to Britain as a crown colony in July 1941. This was strenuously rejected by the people of Sarawak through their native representatives on the Council Negri, and by the heir apparent Rajah Muda Anthony Brooke, who continued to fight for Independence against British Annexation up until 1951, when he finally withdrew.
Charles Vyner and his family returned to England with their three daughters to reside in London. Here Sir Charles Vyner died in 1963. He was buried with the other Rajahs of Sarawak at Sheepstor churchyard. Rajah Muda Anthony died in 2011 and is buried beside the Rajahs at Sheepstor.
Sarawak was officially granted independence on 22 July 1963, and joined with Malaya, Sabah, and Singapore, in the federation of Malaysia
The Brooke Heritage Trust is dedicated to the preservation of the heritage of Sarawak and was founded by the Brooke family. The Trust is a non-profit charitable trust dedicated to the heritage of Sarawak. The Trust maintains a large collection of documents, images and artefacts relating to the history of Sarawak and makes this collection publicly available at the Pustaka Negeri State Library in Kuching, Sarawak.
Max Communications was commissioned to digitise a photographic album of the country and people of Sarawak on behalf of the trust. This photographic album was donated to the Trust by the grandson of Sir Percy Cunynghame, Resident of the 1st Division Sarawak . The photographs within this album were taken by Charles Hose a keen photographer and district officer in Sarawak. Charles Hose distinguished himself as a geographer, anthropologist and collector of natural history specimens. His numerous journeys in the Baram District, brought him into contact with many interior tribes, who, through his influence, came under Sarawak control and made peace with Sarawak tribes.
The photographs within the album have been beautifully composed and are printed using platinum photographic paper which is the most durable of all photographic processes and are neatly captioned using letterpress pasted beneath the prints. The first 16 plates of the album show scenes in and around Kutching, the remainder of the album is devoted to studies of Dayak life and culture, with portraits, architectural views and studies of local life including a collection of shrunken heads!
We are delighted to have digitised such an interesting photographic album.
For further information about the collections of the Brooke Heritage Trust contact Jason Brooke secretary@brooketrust.org
Friday, 5 April 2013
A
number of you will have noticed that in the last 12 months Max
Communications have had a face lift - not only are we now referred to as
just 'Max' but all our stationery and website have been revamped.
This new identity also got noticed on the creative website It's Nice
That*. Daniel Chehade the designer of our rebranding was featured during
an October article and his work on the Max identity was voted in the
top 100 articles of the 2012.
It's nice to be noticed & thank you Daniel!
Top 100 2012 article
Full article
Daniel is highly talented and a pleasure to work with. If you need something designed get in touch - daniel@chehade.co.uk
Thursday, 14 March 2013
Codebreakers: Makers of Modern Genetics
Codebreakers: Makers of Modern Genetics
Max is very pleased to be associated with this project. We were privileged to digitise the work of Maurice Wilkins and Rosalind Franklin who made crucial contributions to the discovery of DNA's structure in 1953 at Kings College London. http://www.kcl.ac.uk/newsevents/news/newsrecords/2013/03-March/Codebreakers-the-story-of-DNA.aspx
Max is very pleased to be associated with this project. We were privileged to digitise the work of Maurice Wilkins and Rosalind Franklin who made crucial contributions to the discovery of DNA's structure in 1953 at Kings College London. http://www.kcl.ac.uk/newsevents/news/newsrecords/2013/03-March/Codebreakers-the-story-of-DNA.aspx
The Great Chart Letters
Great Chart is a village in the Ashford District of Kent. The village is typical of many English villages, with two pubs and a thriving cricket club. The village war memorial is located on the main road with the names of the fallen including the rank, place and date of death. Two rolls of honour hang in the parish church.
1915 was a momentous year in the history of the First World War and included the first German zeppelin attack, German U-Boats attacking allied shipping, allied amphibious attack on Gallipoli, first use of poison gas at Ypres and the sinking of the Lusitania. During this year Mrs Elizabeth Strouts started up the Great Chart Sailors’ and Soldiers’ fund. The Committee of this fund sent almost 600 parcels and 989 letters expressing goodwill and support to servicemen and in turn received back 1,605 letters and numerous ‘Field Cards’.
From the appeal notice of the fund:
“These men are making effort and sacrifice ‘Out there’. How great the effort and how great the sacrifice can never be realised. They are enduring unspeakable hardships, facing difficulties of so many kinds, grim dangers, probably mutilation and death, for the security of Home and for all that is held most dear.”
The letters received back from the servicemen are held in the archives of the Kent History and Library Centre within twenty-two bound volumes. The letters are from very diverse parts of the world and give a fascinating insight into the lives of servicemen during the First World War. The letters include replies by sailors on the North Sea, soldiers in the trenches in Europe and men serving in the British-Indian garrison 100 miles south of Baghdad.
Max is very pleased to digitise this collection of important letters for the Kent History and Library Centre in Maidstone. With the coming centenary of the First World War this digitisation project is an excellent way of providing much greater access to these letters and also to help preserve them long into the future.
Friday, 15 February 2013
Max on Site
Many of the projects that we undertake are carried out at customer premises. Our clients come back to us time and time again because we place an overriding emphasis on developing friendly and long-term relationships.
Below is a scan of a leaving card given to one of our operatives who was on-site undertaking a scanning project at the archives of a major London University
Below is a scan of a leaving card given to one of our operatives who was on-site undertaking a scanning project at the archives of a major London University
William Morris Digitisation
The William Morris Society was
established in 1955. The Society is based at Kelmscott House,
Hammersmith, overlooking the Thames, which was Morris’s London home for
the last eighteen years of his life.
Two
years ago the Society were delighted to receive a donation from a local
resident of two padded wooden boxes labelled ‘Costume and Jewellery’.
The boxes contained glass lantern slides which it is believed were
prepared for a lecture given by May Morris. May was the youngest daughter of William Morris.
Amongst
the lantern slides of exquisite jewellery and embroidery are a number
of family photographs including images of William Morris’s homes at Kelmscott Manor and the Red House in
Bexleyheath. May Morris lived in the shadow of her illustrious father
but was a very talented lady and an important figure in her own right
within the Arts & Crafts Movement. Her love affair with George
Bernard Shaw was said to have led to a divorce from her husband Henry Halliday Sparling; the secretary of the Socialist League in 1894.
The personal photographs in this collection include an original photographic negative of William Morris’s wife Jane Morris. This picture was taken in July 1865 in the garden of the famous artist Dante Gabriel Rossetti in
Cheyne Walk, London. The photograph was taken by the photographer John
Parsons but closely directed by Rossetti. Jane Morris became closely
attached to Rossetti, becoming a favourite muse and the inspiration for
many of his paintings. Their relationship is reputed to have started around 1865 and lasted on differing levels until his death in 1882.
Max
is very pleased to be able to digitise these compelling set of original
photographs which provide such a unique insight in the life of William
Morris.
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