Museum quality prints are superior prints, using full colour inks on acid free, heavy stock paper. They should be "first generation", meaning that they are taken from highly detailed photos of the originals, not copied from photos or other sources. The clarity produced will give you the greatest detail and true-to-the-original (as it currently looks) reproduction.
A note about the originals: many artworks have changed over time, due to many factors ( environment, restoration attempts, etc.). What you currently see may not be the art as it was originally produced.
2007-12-10 03:29:48
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answer #1
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answered by laurel 5
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Museum quality prints are printed on Ragpaper.There is cloth woven into the paper fibers.
2007-12-10 03:20:29
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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The paper that the print is made on is archival quality it should be acid free and if kept within certain limits will not degrade (or at least not as fast).
2007-12-10 03:24:41
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answer #3
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answered by Tim D 7
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Same as "Professional Kitchen Cleaner".
It is a term to suggest superior quality but in the end it is just a consumer product.
2007-12-10 03:15:57
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answer #4
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answered by Puppy Zwolle 7
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