Check out the Manifest Editor →
User testing
03 Image Services

Test 3: Creating a book from Image Services.

The goal of this test is to create a Manifest for a book out of existing, hosted IIIF Image Services.

Scenario

In this scenario the images have already been made available via the IIIF Image API. You have been given a list of image services for the digitised pages.

As a digitised book, there is some additional useful information beyond the sequence of images. We want it to render correctly when viewed in bookreader-type viewers that can show page openings.

To avoid too much work, this is a very short book! The image services you’ll need are listed on this page, ready for copying: https://digirati-co-uk.github.io/me-testing/03-image-services.html

We recommend re-opening this page in a separate window now, as further links in the tasks ahead will replace it in the test browser window.

Auto-open URL: https://digirati-co-uk.github.io/me-testing/03-image-services.html

Tasks

1. Open the Manifest Editor

Visit https://manifest-editor-testing.netlify.app/.

If you have never been here before, you’ll see a Splash Screen, which you can dismiss. If you have been here before, your settings might automatically load the manifest you last worked on.

Either way, start a new Manifest with File -> New, and pick “Blank Manifest”.

2. Add canvases

For each of the IIIF Image Services, add a new Canvas, one by one. Find the simplest way to add a Canvas. You shouldn’t need any information other than each image service URL in the list.

3. Preview your work

Once you have added 5 canvases or so, see what your work would like in the Universal Viewer, and in Mirador, by using the Preview feature.

Send a preview link to a friend, so they can see what it looks like too. (You can send to yourself for the test).

4. Finish adding canvases

Add the remaining images services, in the same way as before - as new canvases.

5. Add some descriptive information

(This text is also available on the help page at https://digirati-co-uk.github.io/me-testing/03-image-services.html)

Give your Manifest the following Label, in Italian:

Una modificazione nelle forbici chirurgiche

Also provide the label in English:

A modification in surgical scissors

Give your Manifest a Description, in English.

By Fabrizj, Paolo, 1806-1859. 13 pages, 1 unnumbered folded plate : illustrations ; 23 cm

6. More descriptive information

Pick a Rights Statement for your manifest.

Give each canvas a Label - use the printed page number, where it’s visible in the image. For these numerals as labels, set the language to none.

Add some pairs of metadata (labels and values) to the Manifest. For example, include information about the Author, and where and when it was published. Add a few metadata fields to the manifest, and try re-ordering these fields.

Preview the effects of these changes as you go, in Mirador and Universal Viewer.

7. Set the Manifest behavior

We need to provide information to viewer software that this is a printed book in the correct page layout.

Find where to set the Manifest behavior property to paged. Follow the help hint from the Manifest Editor to the relevant part of the IIIF Specification to read more information on behaviour.

Set the Manifest behavior to paged.

8. Save your work more permanently

While the preview link is useful, it only lasts for 48 hours. This version of the Manifest is integrated with a “permalink” service. Save your work more permanently, and send a link to the saved IIIF Manifest to a friend (or yourself).

9. Export as a different version

You would like to use this Manifest in a tool that only supports IIIF Presentation 2.

While you can’t save in this form to the permalink service, you can still generate the IIIF Presentation 2 Manifest and download it.

Find where to export the manifest in the IIIF Presentation 2 format and download it to your computer.

Final Message

Thank you for joining in our testing!