X-Tenders
Posted: Fri Mar 09, 2007 11:28 pm
Anyone use any of these Life-X-Tenders or Life-X-Tenders Plus for their paper collectibles?:
http://www.bcemylar.com/xtenders.cfm#lifexplus
I know they're not large enough for sketches. Some sketches are a little narrower than 8 1/2 inches, but they're about 12 inches long. Most are larger than that though. At any rate if you had them in a mylar bag and stuck either one or both in the bag I wonder how much they would help keep the paper from aging?
I would think that sketches are several grades less acidic than comic books. Judging from the comic books I own, I get the impression that the older the comic books are the more likely they are to be higher acidic. Those fifties and early sixties comic books seemed really acidic and not just because they turned brown. The comic books in the 1990's til now are printed on better paper although I heard they dyed the newer paper a little too.
At any rate, spending a little now might be a good idea considering how much the artwork costs by itself. I might regret not having them fifteen or twenty years from now when the paper is starting to show it's age.
What are your thoughts?
http://www.bcemylar.com/xtenders.cfm#lifexplus
I know they're not large enough for sketches. Some sketches are a little narrower than 8 1/2 inches, but they're about 12 inches long. Most are larger than that though. At any rate if you had them in a mylar bag and stuck either one or both in the bag I wonder how much they would help keep the paper from aging?
I would think that sketches are several grades less acidic than comic books. Judging from the comic books I own, I get the impression that the older the comic books are the more likely they are to be higher acidic. Those fifties and early sixties comic books seemed really acidic and not just because they turned brown. The comic books in the 1990's til now are printed on better paper although I heard they dyed the newer paper a little too.
At any rate, spending a little now might be a good idea considering how much the artwork costs by itself. I might regret not having them fifteen or twenty years from now when the paper is starting to show it's age.

What are your thoughts?