meatheadmerlin
Well-known member
I have often wondered about the potential of recovering the gilding from books.
I have also seen a silver color in gilding, this could be silver or aluminum,as I understand.
I have also heard that more recently, most gilding is actually copper based and not gold.
As part of a large recycling operation, this could be very beneficial to paper quality.
It seems the yields would be quite low, but if one was recycling old, broken books
it might be worth it to remove the gilding, if only to keep it out of the paper recycling process.
Anyway, I would clamp the book tight to shave the edges, then incinerate and recover.
Anyone else have thoughts on the feasibility of this?
I understand that it probably isn't for the home refiner,
and most books that would have gold are probably worth more as is unless already severely damaged.
I have also seen a silver color in gilding, this could be silver or aluminum,as I understand.
I have also heard that more recently, most gilding is actually copper based and not gold.
As part of a large recycling operation, this could be very beneficial to paper quality.
It seems the yields would be quite low, but if one was recycling old, broken books
it might be worth it to remove the gilding, if only to keep it out of the paper recycling process.
Anyway, I would clamp the book tight to shave the edges, then incinerate and recover.
Anyone else have thoughts on the feasibility of this?
I understand that it probably isn't for the home refiner,
and most books that would have gold are probably worth more as is unless already severely damaged.