If you’ve been in the live visuals scene for more than a few years, you’ve probably got a hard drive (or three) filled with folders named things like FINAL_USE_THIS , OLD_BACKUP , or DONOTDELETE .
But nestled deep in the roots of VJ culture lies a specific, legendary type of digital clutter: stim file archive
Don't just keep your files. Name them properly. Back them up twice. If you’ve been in the live visuals scene
The way to make modern tech look human again is to overlay it with . That grit lives in your Stim file archive. Back them up twice
For the uninitiated, a “Stim file” usually refers to the proprietary clip format used by (though the term has become slang for any heavily warped, glitched, or raw source clip). But more than a file extension, a Stim file archive is a cultural artifact. It’s the raw, unpolished DNA of live visuals.
These dormant drives are the true Stim file archives. They contain the visuals from that warehouse party, the logo loops for a band that broke up, and the projector tests from a gallery show that ended at 6 AM.
Clone those old drives now. SSDs are cheap. The nostalgia (and the unique glitch artifacts from a dying hard drive) are priceless. 4. Sharing the Archive The VJ community was built on sharing. Unlike DJs who guard their "dubplates," visual artists historically thrive on the collective.