The Fine Art Trade Guild has established these standards in order to
protect the interests of consumers. Consumers who follow the Blue Wool
Testing and the Fine Art Trade Guild standards can be confident that
the art and framing supplies they use are archival.
Key
Requirements of the Blue Wool Test
* Lightfastness of finished print - results of 6 or more on the Blue
Wool Scale in all areas of the print - or its equivalent under empirical
test conditions.
* Guild standard pH for substrate of 7-9, amended September 2002 to
pH 7-10
* Minimum weight of substrate of 250gsm.
Blue
Wool Testing Standards
* Standards for blue wool testing are defined by: ASTM D5383-97
* Standard Practice for Visual Determination of the Lightfastness of
Art Materials by Art Technologists Results Blue Wool 6 = 100 years display
life
Blue
Wool Scale
Measures and calibrates the permanence of prints. Two identical test
prints are created. A calibrated blue wool test strip is masked (1/2).
The strip and one test print are placed under xenon lamps in accordance
with the test standards. The other print is stored in the dark as a
control. At various times, the test print is compared to the control
print. When visible fading is evident the wool test strip is examined.
The amount of fading is then measured by comparison to the original
color and a rating between 0 and 8 is awarded. Zero denotes extremely
poor colour fastness while an Eight rating is deemed not to have altered
from the original and thus credited as being lightfast and permanent.
Blue Wool 6 is the excepted standard for limited edition prints.
Find out more about the Fine Art trade guild and the Blue Wool Scale
here:
www.fineart.co.uk
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