I made some experiments with Arabian gum on different thickness papers, and it did not glue strong enough. It is well possible that some fish glue can be used, that remember me the taste of camphor, and I bet there is some in the fish glue as a conservative additive, some gummed craft are having this taste. Isaac OLEG Entretien et reparation de pianos. PianoTech 17 rue de Choisy 94400 VITRY sur SEINE FRANCE tel : 033 01 47 18 06 98 fax : 033 01 47 18 06 90 cell: 06 60 42 58 77 > -----Message d'origine----- > De : caut-bounces@ptg.org [mailto:caut-bounces@ptg.org]De la part de > Roger Jolly > Envoye : mercredi 4 juin 2003 18:29 > A : College and University Technicians > Objet : Re: emergency travel paper > > > Hi alan. > I was once told by some one it was fish glue. > FWIW. I've been > using envelope flaps for quite some time in the field. > Regards Roger > > At 09:36 AM 6/4/2003 -0500, you wrote: > >At 09:27 AM 6/4/03 -0500, you wrote: > >>Hey, > >>Has anyone ever used the glue strip on the tab of a > manila envelope as > >>travel paper? > > > >Hi Elwood! > > > >If the thickness is something that suits your traveling > needs, it ought to > >work just fine. I think all those envelopes use hide glue > anyway so > >reversibility shouldn't be a problem if you change your > mind later on. > > > >I keep a supply of old un-licked envelopes of various > thicknesses for use > >in traveling flanges. > > > > > > > > > >Regards, > > > >Alan Crane, RPT > >School of Music > >Wichita State University > >alan.crane@wichita.edu > > > >_______________________________________________ > >caut list info: https://www.moypiano.com/resources/#archives > > > _______________________________________________ > caut list info: https://www.moypiano.com/resources/#archives >
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