Am I right? am I wrong? I have some very old cels with stucked sketches and it's impossible to separate them. Advise please?

I've damaged MANY Mahoujin Guru Guru cels this way, no matter how careful I tried to pry the sketch from the cel.klet wrote:From my understanding, it's best to remove the sketch from the cel, especially if the sketch is stuck face down ('cuz what's the point of it if you can't see it?![]()
).
It helps to moisten the sketch first. If you don't, you're more likely to remove chips of paint and trace lines.![]()
<--has done just that a couple of times.
Ok, time for a question bombardment.Moop wrote:Count me in the group that never leaves a sketch stuck to the cel.
I moisten them as little as possible, and only in the areas that have adhered. After they have sat long enough for the moisture to be completely absorbed by the paper, I carefully peel them off in one piece. If I'm lucky, the only damage is some wrinkling of the paper - which, when I'm not feeling lazy, I iron out. Worst case: some of the pencil lines are destroyed. Either way, I'm still happier than when they were stuck. For me, it's all about aesthetics, acidity and the unnecessary potential for cracking paint.
Were you trying to remove the sketch from the cel with this method? I never tried and never will now thanks to your warning. I do use it for seperating cel layers though. Haven't had any damage to a cel.... yet. *knocks on wood*klet wrote:I wouldn't recommend the freezer method. The one time I did that, the paint cracked.