I have read various articles online and posts in this very forum about storing negatives / slides but I still have some unanswered questions. My target is storing with no noticeable color shifts until I die (I guess up to 60 years from now). Film in question is various color negative, slide (E6), and BW films, mostly from the year 2000 and later.
So here's what I understand so far:
So here's what I understand so far:
- Print File sleeves in fully enclosed binders (don't let dust get in). Remove dust/moisture before sleeving.
- Store in a dry dark environment with few temperature fluctuations
- Lay flat so they don't warp.
- I read that you shouldn't crush your films (i.e, don't stack), but also that you have to lay them flat. How can do you both of these at once without a huge amount of horizontal storage area? I currently stack them in sleeves, in paper envelopes, stacked up to like 200 to 300 high. Films are not in contact with each other, they are only in contact with the sleeve. I can put them into binders and stack the binders, but then inside the binders, they'd still be stacked 100 high. Is that too much compression? Maybe no because this is what everyone does?
- I don't have any temperature-controlled humidity-controlled room in my house i.e., not a professional archival space. Is there any practical way to control the temperature and humidity? Like a wine refrigerator maybe? Currently I just put them in stacks in a closet, which receives very little light but I can't control the temperature...unless I leave the AC/heater on 24/7, which is unreasonably expensive. I don't have anything to record the temperature/humidity in the closet over time.
- I know Print File is the golden standard but how much worse are Fujicolor sleeves / random brandless sleeves from my camera shop? Not sure what material they are. but it's a reputable camera shop. But I have so many sheets of negatives in their sleeves, it'll take me days (weeks?) to transfer them to Print File. Especially considering how tight the Print File sleeves are, it takes time getting the films in.