Coupon Code Update Thread
Too bad I'm broke...I've been wanting this cabinet for a long time. Good price!
HOME DEPOT
Martha Stewart Living
Craft Space 42 in. W 8-Drawer Flat File Cabinet in Silhouette
Was $449.00
$224.50 /each
Save $224.50 (50%) through 11/26/2016 (SALE ENDS TODAY)
http://www.homedepot.com/p/Martha-Stewa ... /207087815
HOME DEPOT
Martha Stewart Living
Craft Space 42 in. W 8-Drawer Flat File Cabinet in Silhouette
Was $449.00
$224.50 /each
Save $224.50 (50%) through 11/26/2016 (SALE ENDS TODAY)
http://www.homedepot.com/p/Martha-Stewa ... /207087815
IWish wrote:Too bad I'm broke...I've been wanting this cabinet for a long time. Good price!
HOME DEPOT
Martha Stewart Living
Craft Space 42 in. W 8-Drawer Flat File Cabinet in Silhouette
Was $449.00
$224.50 /each
Save $224.50 (50%) through 11/26/2016 (SALE ENDS TODAY)
http://www.homedepot.com/p/Martha-Stewa ... /207087815
Does anyone know if these flat files ok to store art in being that they're 30% poplar, 70% MDF?
Is MDF bad for storing paper in?...
MDF is typically made up of 82% wood fibre, 9% urea-formaldehyde resin glue, 8% water and 1% paraffin wax. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medium-density_fibreboard)
If I was able to buy one - I would put all my prints in sleeves, so no paper will touch the inside of the cabinet.
You don't want wood touching your paper either, but people use wood frames and wood cabinets. No dif, really, if your paper is protected.
Maybe someone else will chime-in. I'd use the cabinet for sure if I could get one. But...that's just me.
You don't want wood touching your paper either, but people use wood frames and wood cabinets. No dif, really, if your paper is protected.
Maybe someone else will chime-in. I'd use the cabinet for sure if I could get one. But...that's just me.
Wood is naturally acidic so yes it harmful for prints, and yes that includes wood picture frames. In the case of a wood picture frame the mat helps keep the print away from the frame and if is a museum level framing job the inside of the frame we will also be covered with a barrier tape. In the case of the wood cabinet just make sure your prints are inside of protective bags. Here are a couple examples of both:
Bags:
https://www.framedestination.com/framin ... e-372.html
Frame sealing tape:
https://www.framedestination.com/photo- ... -bags.html
Bags:
https://www.framedestination.com/framin ... e-372.html
Frame sealing tape:
https://www.framedestination.com/photo- ... -bags.html
- halftonegraphics
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$15 off $75+ on eBay. flash sale. ends at 6pm pt. code is cyberflash16.
I broke something today, and I realized I should break something once a week.. - Warhol
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halftonegraphics wrote:$15 off $75+ on eBay. flash sale. ends at 6pm pt. code is cyberflash16.
tI was just placing an order for a retropie 3 and decided to check EB before checking out I'm glad I did, thanks!
- rubberneck
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- Location: Houston, TX
Exactly why these are detrimental to prints. Barely fit an unsleeved 24x36. Add scuffing where they remain unsleeved and get slid in.fdi1001 wrote:Wood is naturally acidic so yes it harmful for prints, and yes that includes wood picture frames. In the case of a wood picture frame the mat helps keep the print away from the frame and if is a museum level framing job the inside of the frame we will also be covered with a barrier tape. In the case of the wood cabinet just make sure your prints are inside of protective bags. Here are a couple examples of both:
Bags:
https://www.framedestination.com/framin ... e-372.html
Frame sealing tape:
https://www.framedestination.com/photo- ... -bags.html
Said it on FB yesterday, a lot of real estate for only 4 shelves. Get an industrial flatfile instead.
Doesn't matter, since the sale is over. The industrial flat files are ugly. I guess if you have a dedicated room for prints they wouldn't look so bad. I don't, so would need something more attractive...something that looks more like furniture. (Even if it is cheap furniture.)
- rubberneck
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- Location: Houston, TX
So it's interior decorating first, functionality and print condition second?IWish wrote:Doesn't matter, since the sale is over. The industrial flat files are ugly. I guess if you have a dedicated room for prints they wouldn't look so bad. I don't, so would need something more attractive...something that looks more like furniture. (Even if it is cheap furniture.)
Also, from what I've heard wood cabinets aren't archive safe. Wood gives off fumes over time that'll harm paper. Most bags you get aren't air tight, and won't protect you from that... I personally would avoid wood flat files.
So it goes...
- rubberneck
- Art God
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- Location: Houston, TX
Yeah, avoiding wood is a bit ott, for movie posters in sealed sleeved bags imo