Subject: Nitrate film storage
For the long term storage of individual nitrate negatives in paper envelopes I have been advised by a photographic archivist to use a frost-free freezer. There are under 20 cubic feet of these negatives in our University Archives presently stored at an average of 68-70 degrees and 20-40% relative humidity ( that is all the climate control achievable in this building without major additions to our heating and cooling systems). At present the condition of the nitrate negative are just beginning to go downhill, in that images are beginning to fade and a few isolated negatives have cracked and broken (not gooey or brown dust). I believe this to be the Stage One of nitrate film deterioration. Will storage of these negatives in a frost-free freezer be of any real help in slowing down their deterioration? This option is now being very seriously considered due to concern about the safety of storing them in the archives at all. I have been told that a normal freezer is too humid, but that a frost-free model would be suitable. *** Conservation DistList Instance 7:16 Distributed: Thursday, July 29, 1993 Message Id: cdl-7-16-005 ***Received on Tuesday, 27 July, 1993