Use of bacterial cellulose in degraded paper restoration Effect on visual appearance of printed paper

One of the most common methods used to reinforce damaged paper is to apply a lining, using Japanese paper (JP). The reinforcing material must consolidate the paper without modifying its visual appearance. The unique properties of bacterial cellulose (BC) suggest that it could be efficiently used to reinforce degraded paper documents. The changes in the visual appearances of the printed commercial papers lined with BC and JP were examined in this study. Four commercial papers, coated and uncoated, were printed with cyan, magenta, yellow, and black offset inks. The printed samples were lined with BC and JP sheets. Print density, gloss, and CIELab coordinates were tested in the lined and unlined samples before and after aging. Lining with JP notably affected the print density and CIELab coordinates. The lining with BC resulted in lower decrements in color intensity. The gloss values of samples lined with BC differed widely amongst the papers, whereas in papers reinforced with JP these values never exceeded 6%. Subjecting the samples to an aging process did not markedly modify the results except for the BC-lined samples, in which color differences increased.

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Main Authors: Gómez, N., Santos, S. M., Carbajo, J. M., Villar, J. C.
Format: journal article biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: 2017
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12792/1777
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spelling dig-inia-es-20.500.12792-17772020-12-15T09:15:03Z Use of bacterial cellulose in degraded paper restoration Effect on visual appearance of printed paper Gómez, N. Santos, S. M. Carbajo, J. M. Villar, J. C. One of the most common methods used to reinforce damaged paper is to apply a lining, using Japanese paper (JP). The reinforcing material must consolidate the paper without modifying its visual appearance. The unique properties of bacterial cellulose (BC) suggest that it could be efficiently used to reinforce degraded paper documents. The changes in the visual appearances of the printed commercial papers lined with BC and JP were examined in this study. Four commercial papers, coated and uncoated, were printed with cyan, magenta, yellow, and black offset inks. The printed samples were lined with BC and JP sheets. Print density, gloss, and CIELab coordinates were tested in the lined and unlined samples before and after aging. Lining with JP notably affected the print density and CIELab coordinates. The lining with BC resulted in lower decrements in color intensity. The gloss values of samples lined with BC differed widely amongst the papers, whereas in papers reinforced with JP these values never exceeded 6%. Subjecting the samples to an aging process did not markedly modify the results except for the BC-lined samples, in which color differences increased. 2020-10-22T12:12:24Z 2020-10-22T12:12:24Z 2017 journal article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12792/1777 10.15376/biores.12.4.9130-9142 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ open access
institution INIA ES
collection DSpace
country España
countrycode ES
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-inia-es
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Sur
libraryname Biblioteca del INIA España
language eng
description One of the most common methods used to reinforce damaged paper is to apply a lining, using Japanese paper (JP). The reinforcing material must consolidate the paper without modifying its visual appearance. The unique properties of bacterial cellulose (BC) suggest that it could be efficiently used to reinforce degraded paper documents. The changes in the visual appearances of the printed commercial papers lined with BC and JP were examined in this study. Four commercial papers, coated and uncoated, were printed with cyan, magenta, yellow, and black offset inks. The printed samples were lined with BC and JP sheets. Print density, gloss, and CIELab coordinates were tested in the lined and unlined samples before and after aging. Lining with JP notably affected the print density and CIELab coordinates. The lining with BC resulted in lower decrements in color intensity. The gloss values of samples lined with BC differed widely amongst the papers, whereas in papers reinforced with JP these values never exceeded 6%. Subjecting the samples to an aging process did not markedly modify the results except for the BC-lined samples, in which color differences increased.
format journal article
author Gómez, N.
Santos, S. M.
Carbajo, J. M.
Villar, J. C.
spellingShingle Gómez, N.
Santos, S. M.
Carbajo, J. M.
Villar, J. C.
Use of bacterial cellulose in degraded paper restoration Effect on visual appearance of printed paper
author_facet Gómez, N.
Santos, S. M.
Carbajo, J. M.
Villar, J. C.
author_sort Gómez, N.
title Use of bacterial cellulose in degraded paper restoration Effect on visual appearance of printed paper
title_short Use of bacterial cellulose in degraded paper restoration Effect on visual appearance of printed paper
title_full Use of bacterial cellulose in degraded paper restoration Effect on visual appearance of printed paper
title_fullStr Use of bacterial cellulose in degraded paper restoration Effect on visual appearance of printed paper
title_full_unstemmed Use of bacterial cellulose in degraded paper restoration Effect on visual appearance of printed paper
title_sort use of bacterial cellulose in degraded paper restoration effect on visual appearance of printed paper
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12792/1777
work_keys_str_mv AT gomezn useofbacterialcelluloseindegradedpaperrestorationeffectonvisualappearanceofprintedpaper
AT santossm useofbacterialcelluloseindegradedpaperrestorationeffectonvisualappearanceofprintedpaper
AT carbajojm useofbacterialcelluloseindegradedpaperrestorationeffectonvisualappearanceofprintedpaper
AT villarjc useofbacterialcelluloseindegradedpaperrestorationeffectonvisualappearanceofprintedpaper
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