Can you iron a poster?

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rudgey
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Can you iron a poster?

Post by rudgey »

I have a cheap french music poster to frame, it has lots of creasing and folds. It can’t be mounted on self adhesive board as I would normally do as it has a section missing in a top corner and would show the adhesive board. I’m looking at hinging it after a week between boards to flatten.
The customer has paid good money to frame it properly has it has lots of sentimental value.

I was thinking I could iron the back on a low heat with an iron to flatten it more or should I leave well alone as the customer understands it has had a hard life and that it part of it journey?

What should I do? I always try to provide the best outcome to my customers.
JKX
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Re: Can you iron a poster?

Post by JKX »

I copied and pasted your post to chat GP
- I agree with it!




“You’re right to pause before doing anything aggressive—this is exactly the kind of situation where trying to “perfect” it can backfire.

🚫 Don’t iron it

Even on low heat, ironing is risky:
• Heat can set creases permanently rather than remove them
• It can alter or darken inks, especially on cheap posters
• Paper can become brittle or shiny
• Any hidden moisture can cause cockling or warping

In conservation/framing practice, ironing is generally avoided unless you’re trained in paper conservation with proper equipment.



✅ Your current plan is solid (and professional)

Leaving it under weight for a week and then hinging is a very sound, conservation-friendly approach.

You could refine it slightly:

1. Controlled flattening (better than just boards)
Instead of just boards, consider:
• Interleaving with acid-free tissue or blotting paper
• Then placing between clean boards with even weight
• Leave for several days to a week

This helps absorb minor moisture and relax fibres more gently.

2. Gentle humidification (only if you’re confident)
If the creasing is severe and you want to go a step further:
• A very light humidification chamber (not direct water contact) can relax fibres before flattening

⚠️ But only do this if you’ve done it before—otherwise skip it. It’s easy to overdo.



🖼️ Hinging approach (especially with missing corner)

Given the damage:
• Use Japanese paper hinges + wheat starch paste
• Consider a float mount so the missing corner looks intentional rather than hidden
• Or use a window mount with spacing so it doesn’t press the poster flat unnaturally



💡 The key judgment call (this is the important part)

You said it yourself: “the customer understands it has had a hard life.”

That’s actually your biggest guide.

There are two valid outcomes:
1. Preserve character → light flattening, visible creases remain
2. Reduce damage as much as safely possible → gentle flattening only, no aggressive intervention

Trying to make it look “new” is where things go wrong.



✔️ What I would do in your position
• Skip the iron completely
• Flatten under weight with interleaving
• Hinge using conservation methods
• Possibly float mount to embrace imperfections
• Explain to the client that you’ve preserved both the object and its history



💬 One extra pro tip

Before proceeding, you could even send the customer two quick options:
• “Minimally treated, retains character”
• “More flattened, but still conservation-safe”

That builds trust and protects you from over-restoring something sentimental”
The first P.F.G. (and still one of only two)
outside of North America.
rudgey
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Re: Can you iron a poster?

Post by rudgey »

Thanks, I don’t always trust ChatGPT. In this situation I think it’s correct.
I once put in how do you check if you’re Morso blade is still sharp and it suggested running your finger along it!!!
This was probably pulled from a forum where somebody posted a humorous comment, but it has taken it as fact.
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Steve Goodall
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Re: Can you iron a poster?

Post by Steve Goodall »

I used to "steam iron" paper based artwork in a Hot Press REGULARLY. I won't go into the procedure as it sounds like chat GPT knows everything LOL.

All I will say is - it worked to take out creases and folds / flatten tightly curled artwork / re-balance moisture content in water damaged prints / take the waviness out of watercolours.

OH - and none of this involved adhesive - unless you wanted it to.

Thank god for AI eh - whatever happened to "learning your craft".
Your too late I'm afraid - I retired in April 2024 :sun:
JKX
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Re: Can you iron a poster?

Post by JKX »

I learned my craft pretty well - without ever owning a hotpress - I did own one of those big heavy things with a big wheel - briefly!

(I’m the framer FKA RoboFramer - just incase)


If flattening this was paramount - I’d sub it out to a conservator or other experienced person like you, Steve.

That’s all I’d add to what chat GP said and I only posted it as I thought it interesting that it was pretty much the exact advice I’d give - although it did bang on a bit!
Maybe it got it from NYAF - LOL. - where’s he these days anyway? Hope he’s ok.
The first P.F.G. (and still one of only two)
outside of North America.
JKX
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Re: Can you iron a poster?

Post by JKX »

I hope you don’t mind me mentioning this

rudgey wrote: Fri 03 Apr, 2026 7:26 am ……………. It can’t be mounted on self adhesive board as I would normally do ……….

………. it has lots of sentimental value………

.. but this sort of thing, and much more, has something in common with the Mona Lisa - there isn’t another one and it shouldn’t be stuck down - I think you should upgrade your standard operating procedures.
The first P.F.G. (and still one of only two)
outside of North America.
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Steve Goodall
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Re: Can you iron a poster?

Post by Steve Goodall »

JKX wrote: Wed 08 Apr, 2026 9:36 am I learned my craft pretty well - without ever owning a hotpress - I did own one of those big heavy things with a big wheel - briefly!

(I’m the framer FKA RoboFramer - just incase)


If flattening this was paramount - I’d sub it out to a conservator or other experienced person like you, Steve.

That’s all I’d add to what chat GP said and I only posted it as I thought it interesting that it was pretty much the exact advice I’d give - although it did bang on a bit!
Maybe it got it from NYAF - LOL. - where’s he these days anyway? Hope he’s ok.
John - I wasn't having a go at you mate - I was merely amazed what nonsense AI comes up with and how "some people" without our experience may believe everything it churns up.

To be frank - if my question was "can you iron a poster"? I would go away and try ironing a few pieces of poster paper - learning as I went along. If I was listening to advice it would be from a human who had actually done it and not just read something on the tinterwebs.

Hope your doing well and retirement is doing you proud. I'm 2 years in already and loving every minute of it. The only thing I regret about retiring at 59 was - not retiring at 55 which was my original plan. Co-vid got in the way though & turned the world upside down. I had people to look after at work - but it all came together in the end.
Your too late I'm afraid - I retired in April 2024 :sun:
JKX
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Re: Can you iron a poster?

Post by JKX »

Ai can really only share what humans have done, or suggested, it just finds the info super fast … and sometimes of course the info is rubbish.

Retirement is great and couldn’t have happened at a better time, just as everything was starting to go a bit mad. Our shop has changed hands twice since.
The first P.F.G. (and still one of only two)
outside of North America.
rudgey
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Re: Can you iron a poster?

Post by rudgey »

It all worked out in the end, hinged the work and the customer was happy to show its journey (in a bag from France badly rolled.
BTW When I said I normally use self adhesive board I was referring to photos that can be reprinted and with the customer permission..
JKX
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Re: Can you iron a poster?

Post by JKX »

Great that it all worked out.


“It can’t be mounted on self adhesive board as I would normally do as it has a section missing in a top corner and would show the adhesive board”

That reads that you would have dry mounted it if there wasn’t a corner missing. Good to know that’s not what you meant.
The first P.F.G. (and still one of only two)
outside of North America.
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