How to preserve paper models‏?

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snake7

Well-Known Member
when you finish the model the right thing is to put an acrylic varnish on it
hopefully it will prevent the paint to fade and will keep models in good condition for a time
 
E

ekuth

Be careful to spray the varnish on lightly, however. Several very light coats are necessary. Too heavy and the ink will bleed.
 

grifco2000

New Member
I agree with both of the above statements. Personally, I use acrylic clear top caoat designed for cars, I find it goes on well and does a good job of preserving the model. I had one which 'went awol' and I found later a young nephew had taken it outside for a 'play'. It lasted two days with some light rain and no damage. (Admitted it was under a tree as well). Good Luck! :wave:
 
T

Tim Crowe

With a seven year old and eight cats I sympathise with your problem

Tim
 
S

SJPONeill

Avoiding direct sunlight is also important and if you are in a high humidity area it may help to get some of those anti-moisture crystal packs to keep the humidity away from the model
 

tglenchur

New Member
There Are Two Possible Issues to Address

Yellow color changes in paper model can be caused by light reaction and residual acids from manufacturing.

Choose an acrylic fixative that is non-yellowing. Blair and Krylon have products to do so but first try them with a test printout to see if application might cause colors to run. It can be a matter of light spraying for the first couple of passes before successive saturating reapplications.

I have used polyurethane clear coats but found it yellows under the fluorescent lights in my office. I would recommend sticking with non-yellowing acrylics. Save the polyurethanes for treating wood in display cases and stands or for models where yellow tints are not problematic

Paper pulping often involves sulfuric acid treatments. If the acid residues remain un-neutralized, the paper can deteriorate over time. There are acid neutralizers available. Krylon markets "Make It Acid Free!"

http://www.birchhaby.com.au/ourrange.asp?cat=11&scat=136
 

cgutzmer

Well-Known Member
be sure to use acid free paper if possible for starters :) otherwise above suggestions are spot on.
Chris
 

Dancooper

New Member
There is also a chemical on the market, called G4 and G7, basicly they are the same, with the exception that the G7 also protects against UV. Basicly you paint the model (or the subasemblys) with it, making the paper extremely hard and waterproof. I even know a guy who builds the hulls of his RC ships paper-over-a-wooden-frame.
 
Sig Nitrate Clear Dope. Paint parts before you assemble and your touch-ups/edge paint w/not bleed. This is a paper preservative used to fix the paper/silk span to balsa models. Works great and takes paint well.:thumb:RH
 

bagpiper

New Member
Hi team. If I could expand on the question a little. I have a badger spray gun (used to use it on my plastic models) which now sits idle. Is there any that you would recommend for use in a sprayer as opposed to off the shelf spray cans.

Thanks and hope someone can help.

Cheers
Jim
 

c wiseman

New Member
I work in a museum and deal with this type of conservation issue daily. The yellowing is caused by the inherent acidity if the paper. Top coats are a bandaid approach that do not address the real problem, and the deterioration will continue. There is a deacidification liquid on the market called Bookkeeper, it is available through many archival supply houses. One of the better companies is gaylord.com (legitimate site I swear) Unfortunately it is not cheap. It neutralizes the acid with magnesium oxide and leaves what is called an "alkaline buffer" to act as a reserve to neutralize any new acid formation. It needs to soak into the paper, so if you have done any varnishing it needs to be used on the back side of the paper.
The brittleness can either be from the acid deterioriation, or could be from UV light. UV light wavves are very tight and can actually sever molecular bonds causing the object to literally fall to pieces. If it is UV damage you can halt the process by storing items in total darkness for at least a month (6 months is the museum standard) to halt the molecular excitement caused by the light.
Unfortunately, either way, the damage is irreversible. All you can do is arrest the development of further damage from these sources. As is posted above, the best approach is prevention, acid free paper, glue, paints and UV protectant top coat.
Hope this helps out, sorry it is such a long post.
chris
 

c wiseman

New Member
Bagpiper, the Bookkeeper deacidification spray also comes in a pump version as well as spray can. You could spray it with your airbrush for more controlled coverage, but it just adds a step from using the pump sprayer.

chris
 

howtogurus

New Member
Hi all, really good thread. Best idea is to use acid free paper at the start as mentioned above. I have seen this frequently called Museum Grade and Archival if you can't find Acid Free.
 

voodoo

New Member
question?

does anyone make a acid free cardstock grade paper?? name of manufacturer or source would be great thanks:wave:
 

Llamahead

New Member
How can you tell what papers acid free or not. Would the basic cardstock brought at the Office Supply shop in bulk be the right stuff?
 
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