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How to Weed Your Attic - Getting Rid of Junk without Destroying History (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R880
Discovery Miles 8 800
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How to Weed Your Attic - Getting Rid of Junk without Destroying History (Hardcover)
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How to Weed Your Attic: Getting Rid of Junk without Destroying
History provides answers to the question: when someone dies or it's
time to move --- or just clean out the attic, garage, or basement,
what papers and other things should we save for the sake of history
and what can we safely toss? After reading this clearly written
book by a retired archivist and a retired museum curator, you can
comfortably clean out your attic - or office, garage, basement,
cupboards - with confidence that you're not tossing out
historically valuable (or invaluable) things, and that you will not
ask your local museum to take things that really belong in a thrift
store, junk yard, or recycle center. The book first describes how
to identify historically important documents and artifacts. The
authors explain a few simple rules: 1) a complete or long
collection has more value than a partial one; 2) emotive material
provides a richer picture than factual material; 3) unique usually
has more value than mass produced; 4) documents and objects carry
more information than they intend to; and 5) a 25-year rule exists
without our consciously recognizing it. They then apply the rules
and assess the probable historical value of four different types of
materials: mass produced (from books to vehicles), individually
created (from art work to toys), business materials (from
governance documents to uniforms), and commemorative materials
(from awards to wedding dresses). The book includes a brief
description of the basics for preserving materials the reader wants
to keep and references sources for more detail. It also recognizes
that the reader may not want to keep stuff that clearly has
historical value. For those readers, the authors describe how to
donate materials to a cultural repository. In broad strokes, they
explain how repositories differ, what the repository will want to
know about the stuff you're offering, where an appraiser and/or tax
advisor fits into the process, and what the reader can expect the
repository to do and not do. Finally, the book addresses unexpected
issues that may arise around questions of legal ownership and
privacy. Throughout the book, the authors illustrate their points
using photographs and vignettes.
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