How
and Where to Store Your Family Records
-
Store
books, documents, and photographs in clean,
insect-free areas. Keep temperature and humidity
moderate and stable. Avoid storing records in attics
and basements, or in any area near sources of heat
and water.
-
Protect
materials from direct exposure to windows and light
sources. Light--especially sunlight and fluorescent
lighting--fades records and accelerates their
deterioration. Consider displaying copies of
documents and photographs instead of originals.
-
Unfold
documents before you store them.
-
Convert
your unstable records to more permanent formats. For
example: copy newspaper clippings to acid-free
paper; copy color photographs (which fade over time)
to black and white.
Tools
to Use and Tools to Avoid
-
Use a
pencil instead of an ink pen to label and identify
materials. Inks contain sulfur and dyes that can
discolor, bleed through, and otherwise harm paper
and photographic materials.
-
To
ensure the long-term preservation of your materials,
store them in special acid-free or buffered boxes,
folders, and sleeves ("Acid-free" products
contain no acid; "buffered" products
contain alkaline to help neutralize any acid in
items being stored.) Acids present in wood and most
commercial paper products can fade, stain, and speed
the deterioration of your family records.
-
Avoid
placing tape, labels, rubber bands, metal fasteners,
and liquid glues in contact with documents and
photographs. These items can stain and tear your
records, and speed their deterioration.
-
Most
scrapbooks and photo albums sold commercially are
not designed for the long-term preservation of
materials. "Magnetic" albums, in fact,
contain many elements that speed the deterioration
of records. Invest in acid-free and buffered albums
that can help preserve your keepsakes. (Such
products are available through archival supply
companies)
-
Use
paper comers to mount items in albums and
scrapbooks. Avoid applying tape, glue, or any other
adhesive directly to your materials.
-
Interleave
scrapbooks and photo albums with acid-free or
alkaline-buffered paper.
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