Uncovering A Colourful Past
Asked to digitise some faded slides, we dabble in a little colour restoration.
Uncovering A Colourful Past Read More »
Asked to digitise some faded slides, we dabble in a little colour restoration.
Uncovering A Colourful Past Read More »
Poetic Places is a free app for iOS and Android devices and the main outcome of a collaboration between Sarah Cole of TIME/IMAGE and the British Library.
A short while ago I came across a free mobile game called Kintsukuroi…
Concept: Broken Ceramics Game Read More »
Following a brief Twitter exchange about impenetrable buzzwords, I was prompted to dig up something I put together last year: a bingo card for Heritage sector and GLAM events.
Monday last I had the pleasure of trundling over to the Bodleian’s new Weston Library in Oxford, thence to participate in the EEBO TCP HackFest (09/03/15). What on earth are those acronyms about? Good question.
EEBO, Bookshops, and Witches Read More »
Games are, as a rule, fun, interactive learning mechanisms. What you’re learning isn’t always complicated, but you are nonetheless learning — even if it is just when to burn the rope. That said, it’s now more common for games to have higher aspirations, to impart a little real-world knowledge, however indirectly. Often, this relates to history.