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Quilt and Quiltmaking in America 1978-1996 is a collection of 229 digitized photographs and 181 sound recordings from two Library of Congress American Folklife Center collections, the Blue Ridge Parkway Folklife Project Collection (1978) and the “All-American Quilt Contest”.

This collection is part of the American Memory Project, a website created by the Library of Congress with the intent of providing, “free and open access through the Internet to written and spoken words, sound recordings, still and moving images, prints, maps, and sheet music that document the American experience. It is a digital record of American history and creativity.”

Quilt and Quiltmaking in America is just one of the wonderful collections available through this website and highly recommend taking some time to poke around. The collections are browsable by subject, material, time period, or region.

If you are interested in using photographs, recordings, or other materials featured on the American Memory Project website in your personal projects please read this first.

Featured in this audio clip:

Interviewer: Geraldine N, Johnson

Quiltmaker: Zenna Todd

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Alice Elliott began producing documentary films in her mid 40s after over twenty years of acting in feature films, commercials, and television. Elliott’s film The Collector of Bedford Street was nominated for an Academy Award and she is currently in production for several documentaries including, Two Weddings and a Future about the Christian and Hindu weddings of Carrie and Sujeet Desai, a couple with Down Syndrome. In this audio clip Alice discusses how she chooses her subjects, or more accurately, how her subjects choose her, with NPR’s John Kalish.

(If this clip won’t play click here to hear the story on NPR’s website)

Share Bear loves Jamendo

Jamendo is an online community of musicians who publish their music under the Creative Commons License, making it free and legal to download. I downloaded a song a couple of weeks ago to use in a short video and was surprised at how easy it was. Their website is also well designed and conducive to browsing. The music selection is somewhat limited and I didn’t recognize any of the artists but it could be a great resource for discovering new music.

Under the Creative Commons License, music can be used for non-commercial purposes, as long as the artist is attributed, but Jamendo also offers music licenses if you need music for commercial use. Jamendo is all about sharing, so if you are a musician you can set up an account and upload your own music as well.

Production Releases

The University of Texas at Austin’s Radio/Television/Film Department has easily downloadable production releases on their website. The most commonly used ones are all there including the ever popular Actor Release and Location Release and then there are those less frequently used, yet important nonetheless, like the Weapons Policy. Dig in!

Thanks Moby!

Moby has set up mobygratis.com for non-profit filmmakers and film students to download music at no charge for use in non-commercial film and video projects. All that Moby asks is that you sign up on his website by setting a username and password and then you are free to browse and download available music. Thanks Moby!

Also, check out the Moby Gratis channel on Vimeo which showcases projects created using free Moby music.