[Rockhounds] Labeling specimens
Rik Dillen
rik.dillen at skynet.be
Fri Sep 21 13:06:40 PDT 2007
Several years ago I read somewhere (I think it was in the German magazine Lapis) about a collector or museum curator,
who used actually real microfilm sheets to produce microfiches containing all relevant data of the specimen (half a page
or so). The microfilm was cut in pieces, and half a page was reduced to something like 7-8 mm. He glued the piece of
microfilm on the specimen, and everything was perfectly readable under a stereo-microscope.
That was IMHO the most perfect system I have ever heard of.
Greetings,
Rik DILLEN
Doornstraat 15, B-9170 Sint-Gillis-Waas
Belgium
E-mail rik.dillen at skynet.be
Homepage : http://users.skynet.be/rik.dillen
>>> Belgian minerals
>>> An own find on a Korean (and now again on a Guinean) postage stamp !
>>> Exchange list
MINERANT 2008 - 26-27 April 2008
Bouwcentrum (Antwerp Expo)
Jan Van Rijswijcklaan 191 Antwerpen
http://www.minerant.org/mka/minerantnl.html
Mineral collector's page http://www.minerant.org/
-----Original Message-----
From: rockhounds-bounces at lists.drizzle.com [mailto:rockhounds-bounces at lists.drizzle.com] On Behalf Of Rock Currier
Sent: Friday, September 21, 2007 7:50 PM
To: rockhounds at lists.drizzle.com
Subject: [Rockhounds] Labeling specimens
With modern database programs, the generation of a variety of labels for the
specimens catalogued in the database should be only a matter of choosing the
label type you want to print for that specimen. Since the data is already in
the database it is a waste of time to type it again onto a label(s). One of
the label types that collectors/curators may want to print out is a specimen
label that can be glued onto the specimen. Using 5 point type of most font
types you can easily print out small labels containing the species on the
specimen, the locality and the collection name and number. Four point fonts
can be used, but some people will need a magnifying glass to read the
characters.
For specimens smaller than miniature size you may need to make special
labels with smaller type fonts or attach the specimen to the box containing
the specimen, which is typical of micromount specimens. I also sometimes
glue a short length of sewing thread to the specimen and glue the label for
the specimen on the other end of the thread. Black laser printed labels are
pretty stable color wise especially if you coat them with a layer of a clear
waterproof layer of paint. I glue the labels on the specimens with common
white glue, which you can soak off with water if necessary. You will
probably find that paper of the standard thickness of standard printer or
copy paper will become too transparent in the process to afford easy
legibility and that a somewhat heavier paper will eliminate this problem.
Archival grade paper is desirable for long-term survivability.
If you have a suitable program you can quickly print out a small specimen
label and then a larger box or display label (these are slightly different
creatures.
Rock
More information about the Rockhounds
mailing list