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Five creative and meaningful things to do with inherited family photographs
Working out what to do with inherited family photographs is rarely straightforward. They often arrive in overflowing albums, battered shoeboxes, or old envelopes tucked away for decades, sometimes with very little information attached and sometimes with enough family history to fill a book. Sorting through them can be both rewarding and surprisingly emotional. The challenge is finding a way to preserve those memories without feeling obliged to turn your entire home into a family archive. Between the faded snapshots, formal portraits, and photographs of relatives you never had the chance to meet, it can be difficult to decide what deserves a place in your life today. Fortunately, there are plenty of ways to honour these collections that are both meaningful and practical.
Choose a few photographs for your walls
One of the most obvious things to do with your family photos is to put them on the wall. The tricky bit is deciding which ones to display and which ones to store. As a general rule, editing tightly is best when picking photos for the wall. You want a selection of meaningful pictures that bear a second, third, or tenth look - not a wall full of random faces in random moments. Look for pictures that have both emotional depth and technical interest - wedding pictures are often a good choice, or candid shots at birthday parties and so on. Similarly, don’t try to give every single family member a space on your wall. Pick the people closest to you, and prioritise them. Once you’ve narrowed down your selection, consider using media like canvas prints or photo tiles to add a modern, sophisticated edge to your photo wall.
If you’re struggling to scan and enlarge or fit old photographs for digital printing, remember that less is usually more. Don’t blow up pictures that are too grainy, or that have damaged corners, age marks, creases, and so on. Instead, either get these photos restored or save them for something else on this list.
Make a labelled family photo box
You do not need an elaborate archive of family photographs (unless creating archives is your thing - in which case, go nuts!). What you need are names, dates, and enough context to give meaning to the photos you’ve inherited. So, to get things a bit more organised, use acid-free envelopes or photo-safe sleeves, then group images by family branch, household, decade, or event.
Write labels on the storage material rather than on the back of the photograph, unless you have a proper photo-safe pencil. Add plain notes where you know only part of the story - a quick note saying something like “Aunt Jean, possibly Blackpool, late 1960s” is more useful than silence. If you’re not sure who, what, when, or where something/one is, ask around and see if anyone else knows. If nobody comes up trumps, label the picture with a question mark.
Create a photo tile wall with everyday pictures
Old-style formal portraits can look severe in a modern home, especially when you hang several together. You may get more warmth from casual, candid photographs. You can use a photo tile wall for smaller inherited images because it lets you mix holidays, kitchens, gardens, pets and badly composed birthday parties without pretending that every picture has equal grandeur. Keep the arrangement loose. Group pictures by person, decade or place if that helps. Do not force a neat family tree when the collection leaves too many gaps. Include the slightly strange images as well as the conventionally attractive ones.
Turn damaged photographs into a craft project
Some inherited photographs may be too damaged for display, too duplicated to store in bulk, or too weak to frame. So scan the originals and store them somewhere safe, then use the copies for collages, handmade cards, memory books, or framed fragments. Remember, you can crop a copied picture with a dull background or too much empty space. A face at the edge of a group shot, a hand on a chair, a table full of old crockery or a car outside a sold house might have more interest and character than the full scene.
Build a small story album
A full family history project can turn into a huge (and unpaid!) project in little to no time. Making something like a smaller story album is usually a bit more manageable. The important thing here is to focus on a particular family story - this will prevent the project from getting too wide and sprawling. Choose one person, one house, one holiday, one wedding or one recurring family habit.
Pair each photograph with a short caption in direct language. Do not dress it up. “Grandad pretending to enjoy camping, 1974” is a lot more widely readable and relatable than a polished paragraph about treasured memories or whatever. Add blank pages for missing details and corrections. Ask relatives targeted questions rather than asking them to explain everything. You may get a more useful answer from “Who is the woman in the blue coat?” than something broader, like “What can you remember?”
Keep the originals safe
Once you have chosen display pieces, craft copies and album images, protect the originals. Keep them away from damp rooms, loft heat, direct sunlight and sticky albums. Remove rusty paperclips, elastic bands and cheap plastic sleeves. Store the photographs flat where possible, with labels that make sense to somebody else. You can use digital scans, but do not treat them as the only version you trust. Save copies in more than one place and name the files clearly. Finish with one practical decision. Choose the next ten photographs you want to identify, then stop there for today.






