Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/10/01
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]on 1/10/00 2:30 pm, info@borderless-photos.com at info@borderless-photos.com wrote: > On 1 Oct 00, at 11:51, Johnny Deadman wrote: > >> ... And it is the approved >> 'museum' way of mounting all kinds of prints (check out the Kodak guide on >> this or any guide for curators). > > If you want a mount that will last longer than the prints, use T's of > mulberry paper and rice paste. That's what the conservation group > used at a library that employed me many years ago. How archival > are these papers anyway, not even considering the ink? > > Tim S. The acid free rag papers, even the coated ones, are going to last a long while. It all depends on the inkset and its behaviour with that particular paper. If you are printing pigment inks (eg the Coneset) on acid free rag paper, your prints are going to be around for a long time. Lysonic inks on Luminos paper are tested for >120 years longevity. There will probably be some slight shift of tone and maybe a lowering of Dmax, but these processes are potentially at least as archival as normal fine art printmaking methods. There is no absolute in archival, and there is almost always in *any* method a compromise to be negotiated between absolute print quality and permanence. Few great paintings by the old masters would be considered 'archival' in the sense we talk about inkjet prints! There is an interesting article by Jon Cone at: http://www.inkjetmall.com/store/longevity.html The wilhelm research data on inkjet longevity can be found at: http://www.wilhelm-research.com/ ...although it should be noted that Wilhelm's research does not address the ozone-fading problem that undermined the 1270 longevity claims. Bottom line: pigmented inks on archival paper! - -- Johnny Deadman http://www.pinkheadedbug.com