I would lok at putting them on a CD. Most newsprint is not made from
"acid-free" paper. Therefore it will crumble to powder in a few years.
Librarians go through extrordinary procedures to remove acidity but only
for some select, rare books. If you want go that route ask in the state
archives or a big university library.
Regards
Harsha Godavari
Christopher McNabb wrote:
On Sun, 2002-11-10 at 17:25, Curt Vendel wrote:
Anyone hear have good experience in the
preservation of old Newspaper
articles to keep the paper from becoming too yellowed and brittle??? I
have a large collection of Atari related newspaper articles that I have on
file and while I keep them out of light and in plastic magazine covers they
are slowly but surely succumbing to yellowing and I am concerned they will
dry out, become brittle and so forth.... any help would be appreciated.
In my genealogy hobby (and in my wife's scrapbooking hobby) this is a
major concern. The yellowing is caused by various acids used in the
manufacturing of the paper. The only real way to prevent yellowing is
to use acid free paper and ink. Unfortunately, newspapers do not do
this. The best you can do is to keep them out of the light. I would
also recommend going to a scrapbook store and purchase archival quality
plastic covers instead of plain old plastic magazine covers.
One thing I did with a one hundred and fifty year old family bible was
to photograph the family record pages using using a Minox-B camera
(1960's movie spy camera) and Agfapan black and white film. The
negatives will keep almost forever and I can make new prints whenever I
need to.
--
Christopher L McNabb
Operating Systems Analyst Email: cmcnabb(a)4mcnabb.net
Virginia Tech ICBM: 37.1356N 80.4272N
GMRS: WPSR255 ARS: N2UX Grid Sq: EM97SD