Library Blogs

Showing 161 - 170 of 1855 items
An iron-on patch and a tan baseball hat on a wood picnic table surface, both with an embroidered design featuring a large ear of corn and the words Urbana Champaign Illinois
  • Scott David Witmer
The 2023 iPres conference at the University of Illinois in Champaign-Urbana brought an international community of digital archivists to the Midwest for a week of sessions that explored a range of digital preservation challenges.
Image from The Birds of America with announcement of The Clements Bookworm lecture taking place on October 20 at 10am.
  • Marieka Kaye
The Clements Bookworm: A Library Looks at Audubon, Both His Birds and His Background, Gregory Nobles, October 20, 2023, 10-11am

Moderated by Marieka Kaye and Caitlin Pollock of the U-M Library, Gregory Nobles will discuss the legacy of John James Audubon (1785-1851) as both a brilliant artist/naturalist and unrepentant slaveholder, inviting us to explore the connection between the personal background of this flawed figure and the continuing impact of his remarkable art.
interior scene with row of beds, girl rising up from one of them, and dwarves peeking in through the window
  • Amy Crist
Another installment in our series of posts on conservation work for pop-up and moveable books, this time from Katarina Stiller, summer 2023 Baker Fellow at the U-M Library's conservation lab
  • Christian Michael Antaran
A stand that helps to keep the keyboard upright and stable. Designed it in the software inferring from the pictures and added specific features for its increased stability.
Turtle's Throne
  • Anthony Roland Dimeglio
Thematic home for a turtle! Taking inspiration from Game of Thrones and creating a throne for a turtle using a 3D printer. Interestingly, the intricate throne designs came out really neat.
Picture of Dr. Amir Salaree, a man wearing black glasses and smiling at the camera.
  • Joanna Thielen
In this interview, Dr. Amir Salaree (Research Fellow at the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences) describes his research and why he decided to share his data set entitled "Supporting Data for Solving a Seismic Mystery with a Diver's Camera" in Deep Blue Data.
The front matter of the novel El amor de Matilda by Moiz Habib in a 2016 edition. The novel was originally published in 1931
  • Marina Mayorski
Many consider Ladino, the traditional vernacular of Sephardi Jews, a dead language. However, the growing interest in the language and its culture creates opportunities to learn more about it and even read some of its literature. Recently added to the catalog, Ladino novels originally published in the 1930s and now reprinted in new editions provide a glimpse into the fascinating world of Sephardi Jews in the 20th century.
3d printed gray necklace giftbox with image of two faces in black on top
  • Ross Michael Towbin
Making a custom box equals two memorable gifts in one!
African-American student in a library, taking notes on paper by a computer monitor.
  • Karen A Reiman-Sendi
Collaboration with students on library assessment projects is rewarding, both for the student and for the library. Student learning is front and center during any assessment project where the student is involved as a fully engaged team member. This post shares some thoughts about teaming up with students on assessment efforts.
Shanah Tovah pop-up card depicting an image of the stages of Jewish life (birth, Bar Mitzvah, marriage, children, old age)
  • Gabriel Mordoch
Shanah tovah pop-up cards from the Jewish Heritage Collection are now digitized and available at the Jewish Heritage Collection Digital Archive.