Re: catalog cards - a retro-request

From: Michele Newberry <fclmin_at_nyob>
Date: Thu, 27 May 2010 12:53:05 -0400
To: NGC4LIB_at_LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Eric,
   If you can't find a set, try making your own: 
http://www.blyberg.net/card-generator/
Or use this one to extrapolate a set:
http://www.oclc.org/ca/en/support/documentation/worldcat/cataloging/cards/images/7-1.gif
Or, pre-OCLC, this site: http://bristol.dilib.info/

Having gone to library school in the days when we typed all the cards, 
all I can say is Enjoy!

  - Michele

On 5/27/2010 10:59 AM, Eric Lease Morgan wrote:
> I have a question about catalog cards -- a retro-request; do you have a complete set of catalog cards describing a single book?
>
> In an analog environment, the card catalog is/was pretty cool. Have an item in hand. Determine things like author, title, subjects, added entries, and call number. Using a standardized layout, type all of this information on a set of 3x5 cards. File the cards with all of the other cards describing a library's collection. Allow patrons to search/browse the cards as surrogates for the real items.
>
> The really cool part of this system is/was the tracings. Look up a title. See that it is written by a particular author and has been given a number of subject headings. Follow the author tracing to find other works by the same person. Follow the subject tracings to find "more like this one". Ironically, it really wasn't until I went to library school that I learned how to take advantage of this system.
>
> For more than twenty years I have desired to illustrate the coolness of this system by framing an entire set of catalog cards describing a single work. At the top I would put the main entry card(s). Below that I would put the subject, author, added entry, and self list card(s). The whole thing would look much like a two-diminsional pyramid when I'm done, and it would literally display how the cards were inter-related.
>
> Does anybody here know where I can get a complete set of catalog cards for any given work? A set with only one or two added entries and two or three subjects would be ideal.
>
>    

-- 
~NOTE EMAIL ADDRESS CHANGE TO FCLMIN_at_UFL.EDU~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Michele Newberry        Assistant Director for Library Services
Florida Center for Library Automation              352-392-9020
5830 NW 39th Avenue                          352-392-9185 (fax)
Gainesville, FL  32606                           fclmin_at_ufl.edu
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Received on Thu May 27 2010 - 12:54:06 EDT