dcy
Member
A few hours ago I started a thread about toning, and in the discussion I discovered that I'm not doing a great job at storing my prints: I've been storing them in an album with adhesive plastic sheets that cover the print. I've been advised that ideally you don't want anything pressing against the print, and to the extent that anything touches the print, it should be acid free if at all possible.
I like albums. I think I found a way to make an album that meets the above guidelines:
(1) Grab a scrapbook that is just plain acid-free paper (example), and
(2a) Either use acid-free tape intended for artwork (example) to stick them directly on the paper,
(2b) Or use acid-free archival photo-corners (example), so the print is not actually directly glued or taped to the paper.
That should be fine. Right?
I understand that the optimal way to store prints is in an acid-free archival box, and I will probably do some of that too. But my feeling is that the purpose of making prints is to look at them. So I'm reluctant to hide them too much.
I like albums. I think I found a way to make an album that meets the above guidelines:
(1) Grab a scrapbook that is just plain acid-free paper (example), and
(2a) Either use acid-free tape intended for artwork (example) to stick them directly on the paper,
(2b) Or use acid-free archival photo-corners (example), so the print is not actually directly glued or taped to the paper.
That should be fine. Right?
I understand that the optimal way to store prints is in an acid-free archival box, and I will probably do some of that too. But my feeling is that the purpose of making prints is to look at them. So I'm reluctant to hide them too much.