It must be pretty uncommon. I am still looking for the first red seal catalogue of May 1903.
It seems that many of the larger companies used paper of good quality with only a small amount of wood pulp. While yellowing and acid-related paper breakdown exists, visible in the catalogue cover, it is comparatively less pronounced. The inside pages are white as snow. 99,9% of these catalogues were simply thrown away because they were outdated after a few months. Hence the May 1903 Victor Red Seal catalogue is virtually non-existent.syncopeter wrote:Also many of them are in dire need of de-aciding, otherwise they may crumble to dust in only a few years time, because of chlorine acid (HCl) literally dissolving the paper.
I cannot agree more. My paper and photographic items are stored well protected in a professional archive system: http://www.secol.co.uk/syncopeter wrote:@Starkton
I only wanted to stress that these catalogs are so rare (out of a max of 5,000 original copies - and quite probably much less - maybe only a handful remain) that it may be worth the money to have them professionally preserved