Library Blogs

Showing 1 - 10 of 11 items
Results for Date: September 2024
Folders, newspapers, and pictures from the Marcelo Mirisola Papers collection on a cart.
  • Gabriel Mordoch
A second batch of materials for the Marcelo Mirisola Papers archive has arrived at the University of Michigan Library.
Pink 3d printed sticky note holder sitting on tabletop with stack of colorful stick notpads
  • Aylin Ozdemir
Trying to learn more about 3D modeling and get into 3D printing with an easy beginner project to start, a sticky note holder!
Screenshot of transferred metadata in Archivematica METS file.
  • Abby Sypniewski
In 2024, The U-M Library Digital Preservation Lab uncovered an almost decade-old mistake in our metadata workflow. Luckily, we were able to use this as a learning experience to think about how we can anticipate future changes to metadata formatting standards in the digital archaeology space.
4 3d printed Totoro figurines of various sizes and colors
  • Alexandria SH Tsai
A small bit of decoration for my room.
view of a closed book with damage to spine visible
  • Evyn Kropf
Join us next Thursday, 19 September between 4-6p for our first Third Thursdays at the Library event of the semester!
Screenshot of 3d slicer application with STL file on digital print bed
  • Keheng Chen
First time using a 3d printer to learn more about how they work in person.
3d printed lanyard card holder with U-M housing card inside
  • Willem Samuel Thornborrow
A little self-designed holder to keep MCard and Housing Card together.
lines of stylized text "Mrs Dalloway Virginia Woolf" framed by swirls and columns
  • Jamie Lausch Vander Broek
  • Juli McLoone
Join the library's Book Arts Studio on the Diag (or in the Shapiro Gallery if it rains!) next Thursday, 12 September at 5p to print your own copy of the first page of Virginia Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway!
Cover of Moonflower Murders by Anthony Horowitz
  • Vicki J Kondelik
Moonflower Murders is the sequel to Anthony Horowitz’s clever mystery-within-a-mystery Magpie Murders. Like its predecessor, it is really two books in one. The first is set in the present day and features book editor Susan Ryeland. The second is a classic mystery in the style of Agatha Christie, set in the 1950s and featuring detective Atticus Pünd, the creation of the fictional, deceased author Alan Conway, whose murder Susan solved in Magpie Murders. As with the previous book, the fictional mystery set in the past provides clues to the “real” mystery set in the present.
Student staff member performing maintenance on 3d printers on a workshop table.
  • Erica Ervin
Shapiro Design Lab is hiring 3-4 students to join our team for the 2024-25 academic year