Why We (OPR Volunteers)Do What We Do

April 25th, 2008 by Christine Pentecost

This tribute to volunteers was written by one of our own very special volunteers, Karen Hagquist: 

For most of us in OPR, the long and patient work of restoring “lost photos” is a labor of love, because we love photos, and we appreciate their importance in our lives and the lives of others. Photos are especially important to families who have survived disaster only to find most of their photographs have not.  Any photos that remain, however damaged, are often their only visual record of what life was like before everything was swept away. OPR volunteers try to save that visual record by restoring as many of their photographs as possible. In every new batch of damaged photographs that arrives we see the same tender moments captured: new babies, first steps, birthdays, holidays, school days, graduations, marriages, new homes and cars, vacations—every kind of milestone. We see love; we see what is valued; we see the amazing everyday history of families and communities. I believe OPR volunteers realize intuitively that these are the same important moments of our own lives, and being an empathetic bunch, we want to step up and help.

Photographs and the memories they evoke contain the past; when they are lost, it feels like losing that past. In fact, it is losing the past. The reason is that while memories can be kept alive through stories told and retold, once a photo is destroyed, the family members to whom it belonged can no longer point to it and say this is what  your great-grandparents, your grandparents, your parents  looked like; this is what the past looked like. When photos disappear, children can no longer see themselves in long-ago faces or see the places where their families began. Humans are such visual beings that we need to see in order to truly understand and remember.

These images of communities and families, held within frames, envelopes, and cardboard boxes, are nothing less than cultural treasure. They are so vital to our personal histories, yet, even when recorded on CDs and DVDs, they are incredibly vulnerable, and easily lost in disaster. Once they are gone, the past can be only partially conjured through words, no matter how beautiful or carefully chosen. I think most OPR volunteers, being image junkies, have spent enough of their lives looking at photos to realize that the past we try to retrieve for our disaster families is, also a visual history that belongs to everyone.

This is why we fight for every corner and every story of a photo, and why we try to be as true to the captured moment as we can. That’s why all the sharing of knowledge in the Forum. That’s why we spend a ridiculous amount of time learning to do it better and trying to stay on top of new techniques. That’s why there is always a next time we go back to the galleries to make that mystical connection with the next photo that calls to us.

Rescuing photos can be frustrating, time-consuming, brain-eating work, or an easy joy when the problems are simple. It’s when you have only the thinnest veil of molecules to guide your hand, that it’s definitely the former. But there’s another joy, not easy, that comes with the tough work; it’s a fierce, determined joy more important than frustration, a joy that refuses to give up, and keeps us trying to pull substance out of what often seems like nothing more than a vapor of pixels. It’s that OPR “low gear,” the one that keeps us working away, night after night, bit by bit, until we save as much as we can.

This is what OPR volunteers do, and a few of the reasons we do it. I think it helps now and then to remember what a no-kidding great thing OPR and OPR volunteers are trying to do in this world. 

The difficulty is not what matters. What matters is the joy of saving the past one image at a time.

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OPR is Winona, MN bound!

April 18th, 2008 by Christine Pentecost

Bozeman, MT – April 18, 2008 –

Operation Photo Rescue, a global not-for-profit photo restoration organization, is sending a team of volunteers to the Winona, MN region April 25 & 26 to gather family photos damaged during the flooding of August 2007.

Led by President Christine (Swiggum) Pentecost, the team will set up photo restoration equipment at the Winona County Historical Society, 160 Johnson Street, Winona, MN. 507-454-2723. The hours will be 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Friday, April 25, and 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday, April 26.

Local residents with photos damaged by the 2007 floods can bring them to the Winona County Historical Society. Those that can be restored will be digitally photographed, and the original damaged photo returned to the owner the same day. The digital image will then be restored by one of our 600+ volunteers around the world, printed, and returned to the owner, at no charge.

All work is done by volunteers, who have restored well over 2000 photos from the Gulf Coast, Coffeyville, Kansas, Gays Mills, WI, and from the California fires.

Operation Photo Rescue was formed in early 2006 by Dave Ellis and Becky Sell, two photo-journalists from Fredericksburg, VA. Operation Photo Rescue has since become a 501c3 organization with volunteers from around the world.

“Insurance can’t replace memories, but we do”.

For additional information, please see our website at www.operationphotorescue.org, or contact me at cmpentecost@operationphotorescue.org.

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A touching phone call

April 5th, 2008 by Christine Pentecost

I received a phone call yesterday from a woman who had recently received her restored photos. She was so impressed with the quality of the restorations, and so touched by the generous gift that Operation Photo Rescue had given her. These were very special photos to her, and she said it was hard to even take them out of the envelope and look at them the first day, because she would become too emotional to look at them. Despite Hurricane Katrina being 2 years and 7 months ago, her life is still in chaos, and these photos brought back a sense of normalcy for her.

Christine Pentecost

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OPR is Winona, MN bound!

April 1st, 2008 by Christine Pentecost

Exciting news! OPR will be going to Winona, MN April 25 & 26 for a copy run, assisting those that suffered loss of their photos during the awful flooding in August 2007. We are still working on the arrangements. If anyone is interested in volunteering on the copy run, please send me an email to cmpentecost@operationphotorescue.org. We will be able to offer a small stipend to those with travel expenses who come to volunteer.

Winona, MN is just northwest of where I grew up. It borders the Mississippi River and is just north of La Crosse, Wisconsin. They experienced flooding in this area last August unlike anything I’ve ever seen in my lifetime. Entire houses were washed down hillsides due to the volume of rain they received.

We are imposing a limit of 20 photos per household on future copy runs. While we’d love to be able to take every damaged photo and restore it, we simply don’t have the volunteer power to do so.

In the meantime, we continue to work on restoring the photos from Biloxi that were collected last August. We still have a ways to go on these, but are sending the restored photos home as soon as possible after they are finished. We give a special “thank you” to West Coast Imaging for printing our restored photos for us. They have been providing us with a fabulous service and very professional prints. I have also been using Mpix (www.Mpix.com) and Snapfish (www.Snapfish.com) to expedite some of our printing orders.

Operation Photo Rescue continues to grow and flourish, and are always looking for new volunteers and others willing to help. Please contact us if you would like to offer your services.

Christine

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Keep an eye on the blog…..

February 28th, 2008 by Christine Pentecost

as lots of new updates will be provided.  We have just switched over to “.org”, we have new distribution coordinators, a new baby, a new president, lots of photos being mailed back to their owners, a new gallery in the forum, etc.  We have a lot of new and exciting happenings at Operation Photo Rescue.  Thanks for taking a look!  I promise to give you a full update very soon of all of our exciting news.

Christine

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OPR heads to Biloxi

July 24th, 2007 by OPRDave

I’m happy to announce that OPR will be heading to the Biloxi, MS area in late August to begin the process in restoring Katrina damaged photographs. The plan is to work from Thursday, August 23 through Saturday, August 25.  Exact hours and location have yet to be finalized, but will be soon.

Anyone wishing to volunteer to help with the trip should contact me at volunteer@operationphotorescue.com.

Anyone living in the Biloxi area seeking OPR’s help or who need more information should contact me at dellis@operationphotorescue.com.

Dave

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LA Times article

July 10th, 2007 by OPRDave

Hey everyone,
We’ve gotten some more press. This time from the LA Times.

There are a few inaccuracies that I’m unhappy about. They also used a before and after that doesn’t show off our best work, but there are some really nice quotes from some people that we helped.

You can read it here: http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-photo10jul10,0,518898.story?page=1&coll=la-home-nation

In the end, inaccuracies and all, OPR should at least get a new round of attention.

Dave

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A touching thank you note …

June 22nd, 2007 by OPRDave

OPR recently received this very nice thank you note :

“Gentlemen:
I have just received the restored picutres you mailed to my son-in-law, Guy C.

These photos were all I could find in the muddy flood from Katrina that destroyed my home and took away my memories. I am very grateful for your not only restoring my photos but my memories as well.

God Bless you,
David A…
Please forgive handwriting, I am going blind.”

I’m glad we were able to restore his memories before he was no longer able to see them.

Dave

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A quick volunteer census

June 10th, 2007 by OPRDave

OPR is represented by 49 U.S. states. Apparently, Utah is the lone holdout. Although, I do not have location info on many volunteers. So if you’re from Utah, speak up.

Outside of the U.S., OPR has volunteers from 37 different countries/territories/republics: They include (in no particular order): Canada, UK, Australia, Netherlands, Argentina, Germany, New Zealand, Romania, Scotland, Ireland, Iceland, Sweden, Hong Kong, Colombia, Poland, Greece, Macedonia, Pakistan, Holland, Italy, Norway, Iran, Dubai, Belgium, Dominican Republic, Phillipines, Singapore, Spain, Malta, Portugual, Russia, Denmark, Brazil, Finland, Peru, Mexico and Guam.

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Another milestone

June 10th, 2007 by OPRDave

Today, I just in-processed our first volunteer from Iran. I am amazed yet again how this simple idea based on the foundation of helping those in need is able to bring such a large and diverse group together.

I think there’s hope for the world yet.

Dave

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