Thanks, Mark. Actually, *most* of the 100 yo
stuff is far easier to work with than the 50 yo stuff - the older stuff
uses linen - the problem there is that the starch comes out. But it can
be ironed. Then there is the paper used during WW II - very
fragile, and used (mostly) by Osgood Bradley (a lot of bus drawings are
gone because of it). Then we come to mylar - where the emulsion
flakes off. Give me linen - even floppy, post-mold linen - any
day!
We don't have issues with brittleness - save for the flat filed Osgood
Bradley mentioned. These freight car drawings are now 115 years old -
some of them are as clean & crisp as if they were done yesterday -
beautiful piece of art.
When I opened the tube, there were some very high contrast (non-faded)
drawings of steel - deep steel - fish belly underframes. Gorgeous
stuff. Looks like a battleship of the same era. Lots of big
rivets and bolts.
At 07:39 AM 6/18/2019, mark landgraf wrote:
Bob
It's so much fun to work with 100 year old paper.
I've found that high humidity helps temporarily get rid of the
brittleness in old paper prints.
Steamtown uses a large steam box that they have. I have used a galvanized
steel trash can with a few bricks in the bottom and about an inch of
water in the bottom. Loosen up the rolled drawings, set them on the
bricks, and place the cover on the can for a few days. Then unroll the
damp drawings and place on a tabletop. In couple of hour they are ready
for scanning.
At home, I've been known to hang them in the bathroom. After a couple of
steamy showers, they are a lot easier to work with.
Mark
Bob Webber