Tom,
As always, you are very welcome. I keep saying that I do get rewarded for this kind of stuff. Most of the folks here on the CC are people, who given a chance, give back every bit as much as they get. Sometimes they even send *wood*...out of the sky blue and simply out of the goodness of their hearts.
But it really is the giving more than the gift itself or the getting that is the reward. Honestly, each minute I spend, I know...I feed on...the certainty that doing this kind of stuff is positive. That it makes a difference. That it contributes. That it's important in a small way. That it's useful. Knowing that, feeling that...is a reward all by itself. No human being can ask for anything more from life.
And then, too, sometimes just demonstrating that something *can* be done is enough to open a floodgate. Marc Carlson's conversion of Rees to html is what inspired me. Somewhere, sometime, someone will do the same thing on Leno, or Swaysland, maybe even Devlin.
In the end, there really wasn't much to it. The job is long, and tedious, and persnickety...but not all that demanding. The worst part is that a person has to have, and adhere to, a fairly rigorous discipline. Set aside an hour each day in which one scans and proofreads, or scans and cleans up graphics. And stick to that schedule...faithfully...barring accidents, sickness or domestic necessity. It's like writing a book...you have to write whether you feel like it or not.
The only thing I personally regret is that scanning tends to "open" the book. A devoted librarian might say it damages the spine to flatten it while scanning. And compounding that is the fact that in order to achieve clean results, especially on graphics and photos, you have to weight down the book to flatten it to the scanner bed. I reconcile that damage by telling myself that the book may never have to be cracked again. Certainly, with the search function, linking, etc. I, myself, would consult the pdf version more readily than the paper version.
I did have a good 4th, thank you...I can tell this morning that I *must* have had a good time!

Luckily, today is, indeed, a holiday as well...at least for government workers. Days they don't deliver mail, I try to take off as well. Heck, if mailmen get to take the day off, a bootmaker should too.
Tight Stitches
DWFII--Member HCC