flickr

World Series warm-up: historic New York-Philadelphia baseball images on Flickr

The 2009 World Series brings together two cities uncommonly rich in baseball history. Though you might guess which team NYPL is rooting for this year, we've posted a selection of images on The Commons on Flickr representing a variety of New York and Philadelphia ball clubs of yore.

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Some of the game's earliest years are chronicled in over 500 photographs, prints, drawings, caricatures, and printed illustrations donated in 1921 to the New York Public Library by early baseball player and sporting-goods tycoon A. G. Spalding (whose name to this day is printed across every ball used in the National League).

As the contemporary Yankees and Phillies clash on the field, here you'll find Philadelphia Quakers, Athletics and Keystones in a gentlemanly mix with New York Giants, Knickerbockers and Metropolitans, and of course Brooklyn Excelsiors and Atlantics. Each one of these images of course has an enormous back story, which we hope the baseball history buffs among you will help fill in through comments, links, tags and annotations.

Also check out a smaller set, Proto-baseball, which gathers images of baseball's ball-and-stick forebears like cricket and Old Cat. Here's "Six boys with a ball and three bats, playing Three Old Cat":

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We also invite you to explore the full Spalding Collection on the NYPL Digital Gallery and through this finding aid (PDF) from the Manuscripts and Archives Division.

Now let's just pray for the rain to stop so Game 1 can get underway...

***UPDATE*** Picked up by Gothamist!

Common Ground 2009: A Flickr Meetup with NYPL and the Brooklyn Museum

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Oh how we love The Commons on Flickr, without question the best place on the web to explore treasures from the photography collections of the world's great museums, libraries and archives. NYPL became a partner in late '08 and has since added nearly 2,000 items from our Digital Gallery, and we plan to add thousands more — keep an eye out in the coming week for a new set of Hudson River Valley images connected to our Mapping New York's Shoreline exhibit, opening tomorrow.

To celebrate nearly two years of Commons goodness, next weekend (Oct 2-3) participating institutions are organizing Common Ground, an international series of near-simultaneous meetups featuring community-curated slideshows projected against the buildings (that's right!) of host organizations: a visual banquet of items voted up and “favorited” by Commons fans.

Next Saturday, October 3, 6-9:30pm, two of NYC’s great cultural institutions, the New York Public Library and the Brooklyn Museum, are joining forces for a combined Common Ground spectacle at the Brooklyn Museum’s Target First Saturday event. Location: Brooklyn Museum lobby. Directions here.

Come witness a beautiful nighttime parade of images gathered and transmitted from the global Commons network, meet staff from Brooklyn and NYPL, get your hands on some cool Flickr schwag and enjoy the surrounding First Saturday festivities. It’s a rare convergence of online and local communities, digital media and physical spaces. And... it’s free!

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Milstein joins the Flickr Commons!

Just last week, the New York Public Library updated their Flickr Commons photostream. The newest images are from the Milstein Division and include construction photographs of the Woolworth Building as well as block by block street views of both Fifth Avenue (1911) and Broadway (1899).

Not only are these images aesthetically beautiful, they are also valuable historical objects which are useful for historians and genealogists alike. The latter two collections allow detailed study of the storefronts that peppered the sidewalks of Broadway and Fifth Avenue. Chances are you may also spot an ancestor’s shop if they conducted business there during the turn of the century.

Since joining the Commons late last year the New York Public Library has been met with an enthusiastic response from the Flickr community. Additionally some of the comments we have received have enriched our understanding of our collections. Having our items within Flickr Commons also makes them available for other creative purposes. We look forward to viewing future comments and innovative reuse of our collections!

What's Your Inspiration? Design by the Book Flickr Group!

nypllogo2.jpg Did you enjoy following the adventures of our Design by the Book artists as they found inspiration at NYPL? Do you want to dig in to the Library's collections too, to find materials to fuel your own creativity? If so, then check out my User's Guide to NYPL for DIY Designers and Artisans--it will get you up to speed on the treasures and the quirks of the entire Library system. And with it in hand you can start your own hunt for inspiring stuff. Once you get started in your handmade endeavors, please join our Design by the Book Group on Flickr! It’s an open group, and you can post pictures of your creations there, along with a caption explaining the part that NYPL played in your project!

Here's one completed project from the Design by the Book Group (thanks, egoldberg.rm, for sharing!)--a vintage image in the Library's Digital Gallery has been remade into a lovely blue-hued sunprint:

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Now it's your turn! Get making and start sharing--I'll do the same!

NYPL joins Flickr Commons

Chances are, if you spend any time online you've come across Flickr. Flickr is a wonderful site for storing, sharing and building community around photographs. It's similar to online photo services like Kodak Gallery or Shutterfly except with a greater social focus and tools and features reminiscent of Facebook.

About a year ago Flickr launched the Flickr Commons, a project dedicated to sharing and describing the public photo collections of the world's leading cultural heritage institutions. Starting this past January with The Library of Congress, and continuing with places such as The Smithsonian Institution, The Brooklyn Museum, The National Maritime Museum, The National Library of New Zealand, the Nationaal Archief of the Netherlands and numerous others, the Commons has grown steadily over the past year into a truly remarkable public photography resource.

We are delighted to be the latest institution to join in this endeavor, with an initial contribution of 1,300 images culled from various areas of our diverse photographic collections.

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We think of this as a sort of appetizer course, a sampler of collections accessible in greater breadth and depth on the NYPL Digital Gallery, and on-site in our network of libraries. Lush images of modern dance pioneers; haunting early cyanotypes of algae (the first photographic works to be produced by a woman); majestic geographical surveys taken along the Union Pacific Railroad, iconic Depression-era images taken under the Farm Security Administration's famed photography program; Berenice Abbott's epic documentation of 1930s New York for the Federal Art Project; stunning 19th century vistas of the Egypt and Syria; scenes and portraits of Ellis Island Immigrants, the Statue of Liberty under construction... These and more are now available to view, tag and discuss in the Flickr Commons, and are offered as an invitation to explore further on our own site or in our actual libraries. After this initial road test, we expect to post many more images into the Commons pool.  read more »

Library of Congress + Flickr = tagging for everyone

The Astor Library was opened to the public almost 150 years ago. One reason it was not viewed as a success is expressed in the illustration below:

 805996. New York Public Library

Most of us, I think, would agree that democratization of information is a good thing. Making books, art, music freely available to more people can only bring about societal enrichment. The New York Public Library has a history of doing just that.

Working with the idea of social collective knowledge, libraries seem to be pushing the boundaries further. Even the Library of Congress is considering the benefits of allowing patrons to manipulate and create content. Recently the LOC collaborated with Flickr, uploading two collections of photographs with no applicable copyright restrictions, and allowing other Flickr users to tag the photos with their own descriptions. It is an interesting idea and many of the photographs are great, especially the color transparencies.

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