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Upright boxes come with a variety of commercially available "spacers" for boxes that aren't quite full enough to keep the contents of the folders from moving around. Flat boxes do not have custom spacers, so inner boxes can sometimes help.
Collections with a lot of small objects, small bound volumes, or , decks of playing cards, etc. should be handed over to the end processor, as we have various small boxes that fit perfectly inside of the basic flat clamshell boxes, and could provide a solution. Certain sizes of prefabs can also be made to serve as inner containers. A box full of "mundane" objects, such as staplers, tape dispensers, rulers, scissors, etc., from an author's desk, for example, could be arranged quickly in zip-lock bags for easy viewing and handling during an unanticipated reader's need. On the other hand, such objects could be stored carefully in inner boxes with tissue, carefully labeled, etc. It would depend on how we expect readers to approach them the items both intellectually and physically. As with any other non-standard material in a collection, problem items should go to end processing.
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- BOXES SHELVED UPRIGHT
- folders
- bound volumes
- BOXES SHELVED FLAT
- folders
- bound volumes
Anchorupright upright
I. End-processing an upright collection.
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