mailng-scrols-msg - 3/1/99
Advice on shipping scrolls through the mail.
NOTE: See also the files: calligraphy-msg, inks-msg, callig-suppl-msg, quills-msg, parchment-msg, paper-msg, gold-leaf-msg, sealing-wax-msg.
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Stefan at florilegium.org
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Subject: Re: ANST - How to mail a scroll?
Date: Thu, 18 Feb 99 11:07:57 MST
From: ches <ches at io.com>
To: ansteorra at Ansteorra.ORG
On Thu, 18 Feb 1999, Amy Forsyth wrote:
> We've found a scroll that belongs to someone who now lives in the Outlands.
> We've gotten in contact with the person, and have their address.....
>
> Now we need to figure out the best way to package the scroll so that it
> can be sent through the mail.
>
> Should it be sandwiched between 2 pieces of oversized cardboard with some
> tissue next to the design?
>
> What about rolling it and sending it in a tube?
>
> Suggestions?
>
> Adela
Definitly the cardboard route. I get a book a week from a dealer for
various reasons and the way they pack these books is the way that I am
going to describe here as another way too.
Large piece of cardboard, cut into a cross shape where the center is the
size of the scroll plus a half inch, lay your scroll and the
protective cardboard pieces in a sheet of protective foam sheet, (the
really thin stuff you can get from the container store), and start folding
the cross parts of the main sheet of cardboard around this and seal. The
cross shape piece is sold at some post offices and container stores.
Sincerely,
F. Havas
ches at io.com
Subject: Re: ANST - How to mail a scroll?
Date: Thu, 18 Feb 99 10:59:01 MST
From: Wolfger von Sibenburgen <wolfgervon at yahoo.com>
To: ansteorra at Ansteorra.ORG
> Should it be sandwiched between 2 pieces of oversized cardboard with
> some tissue next to the design?
>
> What about rolling it and sending it in a tube?
Either of those two methods would work. For the flat method, you would
need to mark "Do not fold or bend" on it. Did you ask the recipient
which they prefer?
Wolfger von SibenbŸrgen
wolfgervon at yahoo.com
Shire of Mooneschadowe
Ansteorra
Subject: Re: ANST - How to mail a scroll?
Date: Thu, 18 Feb 99 14:19:17 MST
From: "karl muller" <apophysis at hotmail.com>
To: ansteorra at Ansteorra.ORG
If you send it flat, something as big as a scroll will very likely be
bent. If you send it in a tube, make sure the tube can't be crushed.
Look for a reproduction place (they make blue prints for architects and
engineers) in your town and see if they have any tubes from roll stock
they can give you. It's thick and sturdy and hard to crush. Just tape
both ends, address and send.
km
Subject: RE: ANST - How to mail a scroll?
Date: Thu, 18 Feb 99 11:23:12 MST
From: "Weiszbrod, Barbara Ann (Barbara)** CTR **" <baw2 at lucent.com>
To: "'ansteorra at Ansteorra.ORG'" <ansteorra at Ansteorra.ORG>
> Either of those two methods would work. For the flat method, you would
> need to mark "Do not fold or bend" on it. Did you ask the recipient
> which they prefer?
I'm no expert, but I woud never roll a scroll. It would seem to me that the paints are not flexible enough, and they might chip.
There was a lot of talk on the scribes list about shipping scrolls at
one time, and I think their best recomendation was to put it, between
two pieces of card board lined with non-acid paper, in a flat box.
Alys.
Subject: Re: ANST - How to mail a scroll?
Date: Thu, 18 Feb 99 11:24:42 MST
From: Dory Grace <amazing at texas.net>
To: ansteorra at Ansteorra.ORG
>Now we need to figure out the best way to package the scroll so that it can
>be sent through the mail.
>Adela
If the scroll is on very lightweight paper and colored with a watercolor or
thin gouache, a tube should be alright. Otherwise, if the paper is, say,
90lb or heavier then please don't roll it. Send it flat. Likewise if it has
gold leaf or areas of thick paint, rolling can scratch up the leaf or cause
the paint to crack or even pop off.
Aquilanne
Dory Grace***The Inkwell
Austin, TX
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