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Black sticky notes
Black sticky notes












black sticky notes

"I wonder if it was a precious object to somebody," McKellar said. In between meetings, she'll often take out a note or photo or a drawing and examine it. Under McKellar's desk, she keeps a box of more found notes waiting to be added to the website. She said the library may someday hold a writing contest and ask people to submit short stories to go along with the found items. In a very anonymous way, it's like reading people's secret diaries a little bit but without knowing who they are," or breaching anyone's trust, she said. To McKellar, the project's fun lies in imagining an item's possible history and the person it belonged to. "I just kind of giggled to myself," Longacre said, when she realized the note was her own. She said she hadn't been to one of Oakland's libraries.

black sticky notes

She said she remembered writing the note, but couldn't recall the context or who it was given away to. Longacre is from nearby Concord, California. She recognized the loopy letters of her own handwriting. "I even jokingly leaned further in closer to my computer screen," Longacre said, trying to scrutinize it. That changed last month, when Jamee Longacre was looking through some of the collection and a green sticky note caught her eye. Many of the items seem mysterious without context or origins, and for more than nine years no one ever reached out to claim one, McKellar said. "There's an entire annotated Matilda by Roald Dahl, where a young person put Post-it notes all through the book with just things that popped into their mind as they read it, like, 'Wow! I can't believe the teacher did this,'" she said. Some of McKellar's favorites appear to have been left behind on purpose. In another, the writer Ana asks someone in Spanish to check "yes", "no" or "maybe" to say if the two are friends (none of the bubbles are checked.) In one note, a child praises "Borok Oboma" for his speeches and family devotion.

black sticky notes

Many of the items appear to come from children. There are yellowed photographs, snippets of homework, bus tickets, love notes and postcards among the collection.

#Black sticky notes archive

The archive now includes more than 350 items of all sorts. Oakland librarians send McKellar the things they find, which she then scans and adds to the library's growing online collection. It was pretty simple, I was inspired by a magazine called Found Magazine." "I had always collected little things I'd found in library books and I knew other people did that too," McKellar said. She thought the public may be interested too, so nearly 10 years ago she began adding found items to the library's website. McKellar was fascinated by the things she'd find at the library and the anonymous glimpses into people's lives they offered. Librarian Sharon McKellar collects the found artifacts and posts them on the library's website in a collection titled "Found in a Library Book." An ornate pencil drawing of a dragon a floral postcard congratulating a 40th birthday, never mailed a silver crochet hook.Īll of these items share a connection: They were left behind in books returned to the Oakland Public Library.














Black sticky notes