I happened to be taking a workshop with some conservation scientists, so I double checked and they confirmed what I thought. Foam Core/FomeCor isn't recommended as a product for this kind of use if Preservation is important. There is a version where the outer barriers/layers are acid free, but it's not considered terribly effective. But the core is the main problem. The foam is unstable and usually deteriorates - often within ten years and also gives off all sorts of crap (technical term...)in the process. Is Formacote (Formakote) specifically a NZ product? I couldn't find much about it. It sounds like a board laminated with similar clay coated outer barriers as foamcore. But I couldn't find anything on it's use for preservation or being tested. Are you just using it for the thickness? You'd probably be better off just using proper acid free mounting board and if you need the added thickness for the frame, use proper Coroplast, which is inert. tim a --- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, Richard Smallfield <r.smallfield@...> wrote: > > Hi, > my framer just told me that the acid from Formacote eventually leaches through and wrecks the mat and print and that I should use Foamcore - which is not what a framer preiously told me. > > Has anyone had experience of Formacote not being archival? > > thanks, > Richard > -- > http://smallfield.vze.com > > "Experience is a hard teacher. She gives the test first > and the lessons afterwards." > --anon >
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Re: Formacote
2008-02-28 by Tim Atherton
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