Subject: Lamination
I tell the local "well-intentioned" ladies that lamination merely seals in the destructive acid and chemicals in the paper. For examples, I point out that food, left in air-tight containers in the refrigerator, soon begins to mold and spoil, even though it is "sealed." Lamination does the same thing to moisture and chemicals in the paper fibers. Sure, it may look good now--nice and shiny--but the members may not be able to read it in thirty years. (Those comments seem to work the job, especially if I can show them and nice framed (and shiny) example encapsulated in Mylar-D.) Dean DeBolt, University of West Florida *** Conservation DistList Instance 6:32 Distributed: Saturday, December 12, 1992 Message Id: cdl-6-32-007 ***Received on Thursday, 10 December, 1992