I keep coming across the old LP album jackets (typically early RCA
Victor LPM series ca. 1955 or thereabouts made from two pieces of
thin cardboard) that are split open in a flap and only held together
by the spine paper.
These are the type where the printed back paper page was glued to
the back cardboard which it overlapped, then folded over and glued
to the front cardboard thus holding the two cardboard sheets
together. The front cover illustration or graphic sheet was then
glued over the front cardboard and covered the folded edges of the back sheet.
There is no edge room to use a bead of hot glue to fix these things,
and I don't want to use any sticky tape which will dry out and
eventually fall off as I have seen many do in the past!
Years ago, in broadcasting, we used to use white surgical cloth
backed tape of the kind they used to hold bandages on, but I don't
know if you can still get that and certainly it would not be
cheap! I still have albums that were fixed with that tape that hold
up well today, although a clear archival tape with similar long
lasting adhesive qualities would be good.
Does anyone know of a suitable tape or means to fix these split album jackets?
... Graham Newton
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Audio Restoration by Graham Newton, http://www.audio-restoration.com
World class professional services applied to tape or phonograph records for
consumers and re-releases, featuring CEDAR's CAMBRIDGE processes.