AT-A-GLANCE GUIDE
Do Use |
Do Not Use |
A pencil |
Any writing implement except a pencil when working around records. An
accidental movement can create a permanent mark on a record |
An alkaline (buffered) paper flag to leave notes or hold your place,
such as Permalife |
Self-stick notes, or notes on colored or acidic paper (such as from a
legal other standard note pad). The self-stick notes can be
difficult to remove after time has passed, or if they are exposed to
water. Colored or acidic paper can cause staining and may bleed if exposed
to water. |
A polyester sleeve to hold pieces of a document together |
Any pressure-sensitive tape. NO adhesive tape is "archival". |
Clean, dry hands |
Any substance on your hands such as lotion or "Tacky Finger". Your
hands should also be clean and free from any substance that could stain or
damage records or their containers, such as ink, toner, food residues or
tobacco. |
Clean dry hands |
Saliva to wet your finger before turning a page. Food residues and
enzymes in saliva can damage paper and inks. |
Clean dry hands |
Rubber finger guards. These reduce your sense of touch, and can cause
inadvertent tearing of fragile papers. |
A clean, soft, dusting brush. This gently removes surface dust and
grime. |
Any eraser or powdered cleaning product such as Opaline to clean
records. These products are impossible to remove completely and leave
damaging chemical residues in the paper. It is also easy to abrade the
paper and ink surface using these products. |
White twill tape to secure damaged volumes. If you are tying rolled
records, first use a piece of 10 point card or polyester around the roll
before tying, so the tape doesn't distort the document. |
Rubber bands or red cloth tape. Rubber bands degrade, sticking to
paper, causing it to degrade, and staining it. The red color can rub off
the red cloth twill tape, or bleed if exposed to water, causing permanent
staining. |
Use buffered storage materials that meet NARA preservation
requirements. All folders should be low-lignin, as should boxes housing
photographs. |
Acidic folders, spacer boards, interleaving, boxes or other storage
containers. These materials contribute to the degradation of
records. |
Clean, sturdy housings |
Physically damaged or weakened boxes that do not provide adequate
protection to the records. |
Housings that are large enough to allow you to safely place, house,
and remove the records. |
Boxes or map case drawers that are too small for the records. Records
can be creased, crumpled, and even badly torn from being placed in, and
removed from, housings that are too small. It is better to store very
large drawings rolled than to try and make them fit where they
don't. |
Print boxes or other flat boxes with one side that drops, for safe
placement and removal of oversized records. |
Print boxes or other flat boxes with 4 rigid sides. This requires you
to flex or otherwise distort the records to place and remove them from the
box. |
Spacers to hold records in partially filled boxes upright. This keeps
records from drifting down and developing distortions. Records without
adequate support can also catch on each other and be torn as you try to
remove them from the box. |
Overfill drawers or boxes. Records can be creased, crumpled and torn
from the process of forcing them into overstuffed boxes, and trying to
remove them from the same. |
Cleaning solutions which have been approved by the Preservation
Research and Testing Lab at NARA. Please contact R&T before selecting
cleaning materials for your facility. |
Aerosols, ammonia or bleach-containing cleaning solutions. These
chemicals can cause damage to sensitive records, particularly to
photographic processes. |
Stainless steel paper clips and staples. Always apply new fasteners
over an alkaline (buffered) paper strip, such as Permalife, to protect the
records. This also identifies the fastener as new and approved for use.
ACCO fasteners are also acceptable. |
Standard paper clips, staples, or any other office or commercial
quality fastener (with the exception of ACCO fasteners, which are
acceptable to use). |
Brushes, cloth diapers, plain paper products |
Commercial dusting cloths. These may be impregnated with chemicals
which can damage records. |
Black Pigma Pens manufactured by Sakura or NARA's in-house blue stamp
ink formulation for Declassification Markings. These inks have been tested
and are appropriate for use where authorized |
Sharpie Pens for Declassification markings. The ink in these pens can
sink through multiple sheets of
paper. |