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Sep 29 2017

Bridging Generations: Telling the Stories & Saving The Photos

Bridging Generations: Telling the Stories & Saving The Photos

This blog post is sponsored by Forever, the only full-resolution online storage guaranteed for your lifetime plus 100 years. Forever is also a Save Your Photos month sponsor.

Bridging Generations: Telling The Stories & Saving The Photos | SaveYourPhotos.org

Who is your family historian? Who takes the photos? Who keeps the photos? Ever since I was in grade school, I have loved to hear people tell their stories. Raised on a family farm by strict parents in the 1950s, we four children were “seen and not heard.” I have fond memories, however, of the rare times my parents would tell a story about their past. We would sit spellbound around the kitchen table while our parents reminisced, sometimes in German. The first photo taken of me was by a guest at my 3rd birthday party. I inherited this special photo but no story. I was smitten with a lifelong passion – help others tell their stories and bridge generations before it’s too late.

Bridging Generations: Telling The Stories & Saving The Photos | SaveYourPhotos.org
Cameras were a luxury item for my parents in the 1940s — so a guest captured this photo of me at my 3rd birthday party on January 20, 1948 in Belfry, Montana. This was the FIRST photo taken of me that I now treasure as one of my 100 most important photos. Photo courtesy of Lynnette Feusner.

We All Have A Story

I recall in college returning one of my mom’s 8×10 pictures back to her and asking her to write the story behind the photo. She was indignant and replied, “I don’t have a story!” Perhaps the Great Depression (1929-1939) blanketed her memories. On the other hand, I also remember gifting each of my husband’s parents a photo album, mounting corners, and a black pigma pen and asking them to add a few photos and write about them. His aging father spent several days adding some of his favorite photos and, in his shaky hand, identifying some of the people. We treasure and hold dear these 10 pages of written family history. Moving forward into the next generation, our youngest daughter has created numerous family photo books for her son, our only grandchild, during his school years. What do your children know about their grandparents, uncles, and aunts? Photos are our autobiography. They prove we have lived, loved, laughed, and celebrated who we are – our Legacy.

A Tale Of A Story Lost

With the focus in September on Saving Your Photos, we all know of someone who has lost family photos. Recently a prominent Alaskan shared his heart-wrenching story with me. He wrote, “Our family had been quite good about capturing snapshots of our family life, vacations, milestones, etc. — our photo albums had great value. In the later years of my Mom’s life, whenever the family gathered we almost always got out a couple of the photo books to relive and reminisce about our family life. When my mother died a few years ago at age 83, my three siblings and I gathered back at the farmhouse where we grew up for her funeral service and celebration of life.

After my brother and sisters selected our favorite heirloom furniture, etc., we gathered all the photo albums in one place. These included not only our family photos, but also my parents’, and some of my grandparents’ photos (many of them the 2.25-inch square Brownie photos from the 1920s and 1930s). My task was to gather up these priceless albums. When I arrived to pick up the albums, I was shocked to discover that I was too late. My brother had told the company hired to clear out the remainder of the house that whatever was left over was trash and should be taken to the dump. The company had already hauled everything off. I was absolutely, totally devastated to learn that our priceless, irreplaceable family photos were gone forever, with no way to recover them.

This is a reminder of the high stakes and big risks that people take when they either decide not to preserve their photo memories with backup scans or delay the task until it is too late.”

Bridging Generations: Telling The Stories & Saving The Photos | SaveYourPhotos.org
A page out of Wayne Feusner’s album. His handwriting is an important piece of his story. Photo courtesy of Lynnette Feusner

His loss continues to fuel my passion for preserving my own story and family history that I am working on.

After I lost my parents, I inherited a large plastic tub and weathered suitcase of their old photos and outdated media with no written documentation. Over the past 50 years, I have spent countless hours researching old photos, gathering historical documents, and interviewing distant relatives to piece together my history. But what would happen if my work were inadvertently thrown out?

Fortunately, I was introduced to a company whose mission was the same as mine. I finally found the missing piece of the puzzle – Forever, the world’s first permanent photo storage and sharing website. It’s my complete memory-keeping platform. I converted old media and am currently uploading, editing, documenting, and saving my work in my curated Forever library. Forever is my safe, secure, guaranteed storytelling home. For me, Forever was a smart investment because once I purchased my storage account, I experienced peace of mind knowing that I OWNED it and that most of my money was safekeeping my memories forever — it’s like my generational life insurance.

Bridging Generations: Telling The Stories & Saving The Photos | SaveYourPhotos.org
This is another page out of Wayne Feusner’s album. Photo courtesy of Lynnette Feusner

Stories (and Photos) Lost in The Digital Forest

Now that technology has replaced the proverbial shoebox, we are drowning in a sea of digital chaos. Not everyone will feel the immediacy of doing something with their printed and digital photos. Is it because they’re “out of sight, out of mind?” I have found that most people think about their photos only when faced with a tragedy or a deadline such as a milestone graduation, a celebration poster to display at a funeral, or an impending hurricane or tornado. What are YOU waiting for?

If you are ready to begin telling and preserving your own family story, here are some action steps that I recommend to help you keep your family history alive and go from Overwhelmed to Overjoyed!

  • Make a date to work on sorting and curating your printed and digital photos – preferably 15 minutes a day or an hour a week or at least once a month. Put this photo time on your calendar in your phone for an important reminder.
  • Enlist the support of a family member or friend for an accountability partner. After all, you are doing the important work of rescuing lost family memories, and sharing will keep you engaged.
  • Create triple redundancies – back up! One backup must be an offsite solution, commonly known as cloud storage. Please read the terms of service of your web service. Is it permanent, safe, guaranteed, and generational? One company, Forever, has done it right. Choose your storage website wisely because your story matters. After all, it’s your Legacy.

 


Sign up today for more great photo organizing tips directly in your email box.

We also invite you to visit our sister blog The Photo Organizers for more tips and in-depth knowledge from some of the top photo organizing industry professionals. To find a photo organizer near you, visit the Association of Personal Photo Organizers.


Lynnette Feusner of ForeverLynnette Feusner, postgraduate of the University of Wyoming, is a mother of two adult daughters and one grandson who just celebrated his 21st birthday. Forty years ago, she began teaching people in small groups at the local college, YMCA, Parks & Rec, and in-home gatherings why and how to organize their photos into photo-safe albums. After eight military/civilian moves including their recent move back to Alaska in 2016, her circle of influence has widened to include a local women in business group, a genealogical society, and the chamber of commerce. She hosted the first-ever Save Your Photos Day event in Alaska on September 9. Lynnette is a Lead Ambassador with Forever. She and her husband LeRoy will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary next June!

 

Bridging Generations: Telling The Stories & Saving The Photos | SaveYourPhotos.org

Written by Andi Willis · Categorized: Creating Memories · Tagged: forever, save your photos, story telling, tell your story

Sep 15 2017

Crafting a Legacy: Telling Your Story in Photos

Crafting a Legacy: Telling Your Story in Photos

This blog post is sponsored by Forever, the only full-resolution online storage guaranteed for your lifetime plus 100 years. Forever is also a Save Your Photos month sponsor.

Crafting A Legacy: Telling Your Story In Photos | SaveYourPhotos.org

I’m “that” relative. You know, the one with the camera at every function, snapping tons of photos that may or may not ever be seen. I’ve been known to say, “You can smile and be cute or make a face, I’m taking the picture either way!”

I’m THE resource when a picture is needed. The one that can be counted on to capture the event.  A historian of sorts with pictures all over the place. My years behind the lens have taught me a valuable lesson- there is always a story to be told and the person to best tell it is the subject and not others.

 

Leaving A Legacy Versus Crafting A Legacy

This lesson was lived out in my life recently when I was asked to complete an almost emotionally impossible task. Would I create a photo book using my mom’s pictures to chronicle my deceased sister’s life? My younger sister, Tina, fought a valiant and brave battle against cancer. She left two incredible children, who are now young adults, and a husband.  My mom wanted to give a memory book my sister’s new grandbaby. Momma handed me a traditional scrapbook she had begun along with a stack of pictures and said, “Go for it.”

Organizing her pictures brought a litany of questions…most without answers.  How do you encapsulate a life in a mere few pages? Which stories were to be shared and how much of each? What stories were for my mom to tell, and which ones belonged to Tina’s family? Who were the people in some of the photos? What were their names and were they really friends? How to present a grandmother this baby will never know in such a way she will never forget?

These questions brought me to the idea of crafting a legacy…writing my own story.

There is a lot written about “Leaving a Legacy” but very little about crafting a legacy. Crafting your legacy to me means the deliberate telling of your own story, in your words with your thoughts. Sharing with others your gifts, your struggles, your talents and your funny stories. It’s not being vain, proud, or self-centered. It’s about being real, honest, transparent, brave and fun! It’s also, overwhelming.

So, how to begin?

 Crafting A Legacy: Telling Your Story In Photos | SaveYourPhotos.org

Make Your Plan

Start with the idea that you have 20 blank pages to fill. Would you want your book to read like a comedy, a historical novel, a genealogist’s treasure trove, or written to future grandchildren? How far back do you want to go? Will it be a baby book to adult or simply chronicle a struggle that you have overcome or are going through? Should it be themed with your travels, your artwork, your day to day activities, or will it be a highlight reel of your blessings? The joy of crafting your legacy is that you get to choose!

 

Get Your Photos in One Spot

Pull out hard drives, boxes of pictures, VHS tapes, flash drives, floppy disks, framed pictures, scrapbooks that you may want to use get them and get them all in one place. I know this may seem overwhelming at first, but it is so freeing once you get started. Trust the process, it works!

 

Divide By Decade Or Themes (Your Choice)

It took you a long time to get where you are, so don’t let the details cripple you!

For your printed photos, divide by decades or even bigger chunks of time.  Birth- Elementary School. Junior High- College. First job –kids. Or, break it down by events-family vacations, holidays, trips, sports, etc.

Decide to work on this project in specific amounts of time so that you continue and don’t give up in frustration. For example, 15 minutes of “me” time daily.

As you look at old photos you will remember, laugh, cry, and wonder where the time has gone. Jot down stories, notes and begin your “filtering”. You have permission to get rid of pictures of people who mean nothing to you or whose name you can’t remember. Toss blurry and out of focus photos along with doubles (unless you make a specific pile with a name to be given away shortly). Declutter your life as you go, but write notes on the stories.

Tell your story, share your pictures, craft your legacy. It’s the sweetest and most rewarding journey you’ll ever get to take. Click To Tweet

 

Choose a Permanent Home for Your Digital Photos

Having one place to preserve all my memories and family stories was the first step to my peace of mind solution. When you are ready to digitize, consider the cost, quality, long term storage guarantees, and data migration. For me, that solution was the company Forever.  They offer a free account to try out and then permanent storage options that fit your needs. And with Forever, you pay one time and you own your storage, forever. You do not need to ever pay any additional fees. I trust Forever to be around 100 years from now because when I purchased my Forever account, much of that money went into a fund that will continue to pay for the maintenance of my photos over time.  In addition, I never need to worry about my family knowing the correct passwords or where the pictures are, because Forever is generational! I own my account so it’s like insurance for my photos!

They also have privacy and legacy options for my albums. The choices are: Private (only I see), Friends and Family (my friends and family see) and Public (anyone can see). They also have preservation settings that will allow you to make portions of your account public so your legacy will live on.  So, in my sister’s case, I made her albums public so folks can search by her name and see her pictures and the stories of her life.

In Forever, I was also able to create and print a digital photo book of the photos in my Forever account. Do your research and choose the option best for you.  Remember free online services come with lots of strings attached. I have learned that those free photo sites are not a solution for my family memories.

 Forever | Save Your Photos Month 2017 Sponsor

Tell Your Story…Craft Your Legacy

You’ve been inspired by old pictures and the stories you have remembered. You have decided on how you want to tell your story. Now comes the time to start crafting a legacy! Will you create an online account, a digital storybook or a traditional scrapbook? There are benefits to each, but my current favorite is the digital story/photo book. I have five children and three grandchildren, so the option of making it once and printing multiple copies appeals to me! The end format is not as important as the gathering and recording of the tales.

If this still seems overwhelming and you are thinking, “Yeah, but where do I start?,” let’s go back to middle school English class. Ask yourself (and answer) the 5 W’s and an H. Who, What, Where, Why, When, and How.

Crafting A Legacy: Telling Your Story In Photos | SaveYourPhotos.org

Who

  • Who are you?
  • Who are your parents?
  • Who are your siblings?
  • Who raised you?
  • Who were the influences in your life?
  • Who encouraged you?
  • Who are your brothers and sisters?
  • Who are your children?
  • Who are you writing to /for?
  • Who was your best friend growing up?

What

  • What is your favorite color?
  • What is your favorite place to vacation, spend time, to be?
  • What do you enjoy in your free time?
  • What was your job?
  • What skills and talents do you possess?
  • What would you like to learn?
  • What would you do differently?
  • What are your favorite foods?
  • What circumstances have molded and shaped you into the person you are?
  • What adversity have you overcome?
  • What did you get in trouble most for as a child?

Where

  • Where were you born?
  • Where have you lived?
  • Where is your favorite “happy” place?
  • Where have you traveled?
  • Where would you like to travel?
  • Where did you meet your significant other?
  • Where to you like to spend time?

Why

  • Why are you writing?
  • Why did you stay in a tough spot (marriage, job, career, country, etc.)?
  • Why did you decide to leave a tough spot?
  • Why are you the way you are?

When

  • When were you born?
  • When did you embrace your faith?
  • When did you decide to have children?
  • When did you decide not to have children?
  • When did you decide to open a business, work for yourself, not work for a company, not work for yourself?
  • When did you find out you were adopted?

How

  • How do you live on a day to day basis?
  • How did others help you along your journey?
  • How has your faith (or lack of) influenced who you have become or how you live?
  • How did you get to this country/state?

Crafting A Legacy: Telling Your Story In Photos | SaveYourPhotos.org

This isn’t an exhaustive list of questions, but an encouragement to take action, to get started and to begin crafting a legacy.  You have a story to tell, only you can tell it, and only you can give it justice. Tell your story, share your pictures, craft your legacy. It’s the sweetest and most rewarding journey you’ll ever get to take.


Sign up today for more great photo organizing tips directly in your email box.

We also invite you to visit our sister blog The Photo Organizers for more tips and in-depth knowledge from some of the top photo organizing industry professionals. To find a photo organizer near you, visit the Association of Personal Photo Organizers.


Kathy Lanham of Forever.comKathy Lanham is a mother of 5 (grandmother of 3!)  She has 20+ years’ experience in the memory keeping field helping folks collect, organize, and celebrate their photos. She is a photographer and a Senior Lead Ambassador with Forever. She enjoys travel, reading, and eating out! She lives in KY with her husband Mike.

 

 

 

 

 

Crafting A Legacy: Telling Your Story In Photos | SaveYourPhotos.org

 

Written by Andi Willis · Categorized: Creating Memories · Tagged: creating a legacy, forever, how to make a photo book, photo album, photo book, tell your story

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