Subject: Hahnemuhle Photo Rag paper
I am involved with a publisher who has printed a job on uncoated Hahnemuhle Photo Rag paper. The paper contains Optical Brightening Agents (OBA). It is the base paper which may later be coated to enable digital printing. In this case the paper is uncoated and has been printed on a letterpress using a rubber based ink. During the sewing of the books, we have noticed a yellowing effect occurring. I have seen the same effect on digital papers before, but they were coated papers. On the Hahnemuhle paper, the yellowing is a pale acid-yellow. On the coated digital papers I have seen, the yellowing has been the same acid-yellow but much stronger. The yellowing is observable when looking at the surface of the paper, but is more pronounced when viewing the paper backlit by natural light. The paper has been folded and stacked prior to sewing and then returned to the stacks when sewn. The effect was observed when sewing some of the books. Not all of the paper is affected. The paper which is affected shows the yellowing across the whole sheet but it is more prominent toward the outer edge. There is a band, several centimeters in width, where the yellowing occurs on all four edges of the stacked pages. At the very edge of the paper, there is a band 2-3 millimeters in width where the pages are white and there is no yellowing. Through research I have obtained the following information: * The OBA's are causing this effect * The OBA's alter the reflection of ultraviolet light in such a way as to make the paper appear cooler white * The yellowing occurs in paper which is stacked or contained (apparently it has to do with out-gassing) * exposure to light and air will get rid of the yellowing What I am looking for is a better understanding of the cause and possible treatment. There is a lot of money tied up in the project so reprinting is the least attractive option. We would like to light bleach the pages and then proceed with the binding. I have experimented with a UV light (I don't know if it is UVA or UVB) and it has gotten rid of some of the yellowing. It is very slow and possibly I don't have the right UV bulb. After exposing some of the pages to natural light the yellow has dimensioned more evenly and perhaps a bit better than with the UV bulb, but the edition is large and natural light would be difficult. I have thought of grow lights for plants and sun-tanning lights as possibilities. We can rig up florescent lights and put the right kind of bulb in, if we know which one to use. The last query is whether this will come back after we have bleached the paper. Is it a one time phenomenon, or something intrinsic to the paper which will re-appear? Peter Geraty Praxis Bindery 1 Cottage Street, Unit 18 Easthampton, MA 01027-1667 413-527-7275 *** Conservation DistList Instance 21:4 Distributed: Friday, May 11, 2007 Message Id: cdl-21-4-022 ***Received on Wednesday, 9 May, 2007