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Zeutschel Ps and Qs at Maine State Library

The Zeutschel OS Q Scanner adds Production Capabilities to Maine State Library’s Digital Preservation Program

A few weeks past, The Crowley Company hosted a series of well-attended Zeutschel OS Q online demo events to introduce this impressive A0-A2 overhead and cultural heritage scanner series to an audience that is still largely non-traveling.

Adam Fisher

One of the highlights of the event was a live use-case discussion with Adam Fisher, Director of Collections, Digital Initiatives and Promotion for the Maine State Library (MSL). Interviewed by Crowley vice president of sales and marketing, Matthew McCabe, Fisher discussed the Library’s history, collections and digitization program, including how it both lends and shares its four Zeutschel scanners (three Zeutschel 12002 Advanced models*purchased in 2015 and the OS Q A1 model purchased in 2020).

If you’ve got 15 minutes, the interview is worth a listen. And if you think the office/library behind Adam looks even more quiet than your typical library…it is! The library is undergoing a three-year renovation and paired with the recent (and ongoing) pandemic, it is essential personnel only so we’re especially appreciative of Adam’s time and appearance.

About Maine State Library

According to the MSL website, the Collection Development, Digital Initiatives and Promotion Division is responsible for traditional collection development activities, including acquiring, cataloging, repairing and preserving library collections. The unit also leads the Library’s efforts to build a digital repository of collections that can be searched and accessed online. Called DigitalMaine, the repository was launched in 2013 and became a service hub of the Digital Public Library of America (DPLA) in 2017 to provide greater exposure to digital archives housed throughout the State.

The Library also lends its scanners; two of the Zeutschel OS 12002 models are located elsewhere in the State to broaden the digital reach of the library and negate the need for travel to Augusta. Additionally, it allows the remaining OS 12002 and the new OS Q1 to be used onsite by smaller Maine institutions that have a collection to digitize and share. In fact, says Fisher, “We actually don’t have paid digitization staff. All of our work is done by volunteers or by the staff or volunteers of the visiting institutions.”

But ‘b’ comes before ‘d’ and before there was digital, there were books. The Maine State Legislature authorized the purchase of books in 1836 and the library has been growing exponentially since then. Today, the Maine State Library resides in the State House complex along with the Maine State Archives and the Maine State Museum.

Why the OS Q scanner?

The Zeutschel OS Q scan systems are FADGI four-star capable and maximize production efficiency with bilateral scanning and other unique features.

As Fisher explains, “We scan for access, but also for preservation. We needed a scan system that could offer both OCR for searchability and which could give us an accurate representation of the original. Many of the ledgers and older materials have pages which are disintegrating; it’s critical we capture these to ensure that we have a representative copy and to reduce any further wear and tear on the originals.”

The impetus for the new scanner search came about from a desire to scan newspaper spreads. The Library staff considered several overhead scanners and ultimately chose the Zeutschel OS Q for several reasons:

In closing, Fisher notes that having the Zeutschel OS Q has helped to make the Maine State Library “future proof.” With its state-of-the-art technology designed for the evolution of digitization guidelines and requirements, the OS Q will be an essential tool in the preservation of Maine history for years to come.

Update:

As of September 2023, Zeutschel no longer manufactures the OS 12002-Series. Its replacement, the OS C, offers the same ease of use, image quality, and flexible software options perfect for library, archival and research use.

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