...Perma-Film pops up again while processing a film collection.
Regular readers will recall that we are not fans of film coatings. They were designed to make projection prints--which, in lending libraries, could be projected hundreds of times--easier to thread into the projector and less likely to retain major scratches from poorly maintained projectors. But, decades on, the chemistry can’t be good for the films. Even their cans get a slippery coating when films are treated. Would YOU trust something that impregnates the emulsion of a film? The emulsion holds the image.
Looking online and, thanks to the Internet Archive, here’s a self-promotion brochure about how Perma-Film is applied, with what appear to be sincere letters of thanks from grateful users. (Grateful users who didn’t have to save the prints for decades to come.) Page one below, and full brochure at this link: https://archive.org/details/TNM_Perma_Film_Protection_-_Permafilm_Inc_1966_20170906_0184
It was Film Service Lab of Boston which applied the coating to the film on my bench.