Library Digital Collections

This guide provides Digital Library Collections tutorials, data, scourse-specific IIIF guides and other digitized primary resources information.

UCLA Library Digital Collections site

Screen shot of the home page of the UCLA Library Digital Collections site

Content

The UCLA Library Digital Collections website provides access to research-grade digitized primary source collections held by the UCLA Library and partnering organizations from around the world. Digital collections generally represent a fraction of what libraries, museums and archives own in boxes and folders. What they offer instead of bulk quantity is robust quality and technological sophistication: selectively curated high-value materials that have been prioritized for item-level description and cutting-edge digital processing, with advanced features for rigorous inquiry. Approximately half of the items in UCLA Digital Collections are direct facsimiles of physical materials in UCLA Library Special Collections, where they can be viewed and verified in person. Other collections have been added to the Digital Collections site through grant-funded "post-custodial" digitization arrangements, such as IDEP (The International Digital Ephemera Project) and MEAP (the Modern Endangered Archives Program. These collections can only be engaged remotely, as the originals are typically located thousands of miles away, and may not be available for on-site viewing. 

Collections

Digital collections contain primary source content, that is, rare and unique materials with a wide range of formats (e.g. photograph, sketch, poster, manuscript, audio, video, etc.), and are different from other digital content available through the library, such as ebooks and scholarly journals. 

Leading collections (by number of items):