Museum archivists, artists, photographers, and aficionados of optimal storage solutions will both appreciate and value this pack of 480 sheets of Buffered Archival Tissues from Archival Methods. These tissues are suitable for interleaving prints and drawings, as well as in the preservation and protection of artifacts. In portfolios, the tissues will help prevent the possibility of damage from the result of rubbing, while also adding to the work's professional aesthetics. Buffered archival tissues are frequently used in the preservation of gowns, historic uniforms, and various textiles. An archival product, the tissue is acid- and lignin-free, easy to fold and pad, and crumple without forming hard edges.
Ask Our Experts800-606-6969
Hello, Log InAccount & Orders
Video Chat with a Photography Expert - Live
Key Features
- Acid- & Lignin-Free
- Prevents Pages from Rubbing Together
- High Quality / Buffered
- Cost-Efficient Image Protection
Museum archivists, artists, photographers, and aficionados of optimal storage solutions will both appreciate and value this pack of 480 sheets of Buffered Archival Tissues from Archival Methods. These tissues are suitable for interleaving prints and drawings, as well as in the preservation and protection of artifacts. In portfolios, the tissues will help prevent the possibility of damage from the result of rubbing, while also adding to the work's professional aesthetics. Buffered archival tissues are frequently used in the preservation of gowns, historic uniforms, and various textiles. An archival product, the tissue is acid- and lignin-free, easy to fold and pad, and crumple without forming hard edges.
More DetailsArchival Methods 45-006 Overview
Widely used to wrap gowns, historic uniforms, and textile items
Buffered with calcium carbonate 2 to 3% alkaline reserve, pH 9 +/-0.5
Lightweight (20 to 34 g/sq. m, 1.5 mil)
Passes the PAT (Photographic Activity Test), ISO 14523 (formerly ANSI IT9.16), and TAPPI T444 silver tarnish test
High-quality, buffered, archival tissue papers for interleaving and wrapping
Tissues are buffered for added protection
Acid- and lignin-free
Easy to fold and pad, and crumple without hard edges
Sulfur Content: Maximum 0.0004
UPC: 813903024529
Archival Methods 45-006 Specs
| Thickness | |
| Dimensions |
Packaging Info
| Package Weight | |
| Box Dimensions (LxWxH) |
Archival Methods 45-006 Reviews
Good as spacers between prints
By Jan
Rated 5 out of 5
Date: 2024-09-23
Subtle paper pattern will be seen if used in a press against a glossy or semi-gloss print surface, but otherwise fine as a separator for finished prints.
yes
By Maarten Vanden
Rated 5 out of 5
Date: 2020-11-30
yes, nice !
See any errors on this page?
What is the difference between the buffered and ...
What is the difference between the buffered and unbuffered Archival Methods tissue?
Buffered tissue has a buffering agent (usually calcium carbonate) added to the paper pulp during the paper making process to increase the pH level of the paper and make it more alkaline. By increasing the pH of the paper, it becomes non-acidic, and assists in neutralizing other acids in the environment that may make the paper or tissue become acidic over time. As acids can destroy photographic prints over time, buffered paper is preferred for most photographic prints. Un-buffered paper is paper that has not been altered, and is typically recommended for archival storage of protein-based materials, which are often materials that come from animals, such as leather, wool, silk, feathers, horsehair, pearls, etc., but can also include cyanotype prints and blueprints to prevent them from fading.
Date published: 2025-01-04
Has anyone used this tissue to lay on top of a ...
Has anyone used this tissue to lay on top of a fine art paper, then rolled it? Would this tissue cause any scuffing of the fine art paper or image area when delicately rolled? Thanks!
When using the Archival Methods 16 x 20" Buffered Archival Tissue Papers, gently rolling the art work with the tissue paper on top will not cause any scuffing, as long as the "fine art paper" is dry.
Date published: 2020-03-29
