The most basic protection that a vinyl record requires is at least a paper or plastic inner sleeve – these are the sleeves that your records are inserted into before being inserted into the outer sleeve (cover). The most basic inner sleeve is a plain white (or black) paper inner sleeve with a cutout to view the label.

What are record sleeves used for?

thick clear plastic poly outer bags or sleeves. They will hold their shape and provide more than enough protection to your record album jackets. For thicker multi-record boxsets, you’ll need a wider outer sleeve.

Should I sleeve my vinyls?

Yes, we know, this is different than the paper liners most records come with. In addition to storing records in a plastic sleeve, you should store record covers in a plastic sleeve. To recap: put the record in a plastic sleeve and the album cover in a plastic sleeve.

What is the sleeve of a vinyl called?

record sleeve
A record sleeve (not to be conflated with a record jacket/cover) is the outer covering of a vinyl record. Alternative terms are dust sleeve and album liner. A record sleeve can be made of paper, cardboard, rice paper, polypropylene etc…, can be acid-free or anti-static and also contain an inner liner (polylined).

What is this sleeve on a Capitol record?

This sleeve is probably the most popular Capitol sleeve for Canadian records. Known as the “red Pathé” sleeve, it served its purpose for most of the 6000 series during the early 60s. This sleeve was used for Capitol releases as well as Pathé and Angel releases.

What are some of the 45’S with the sleeve on them?

A few hit 45’s that had this sleeve were Woman by Peter And Gordon (Capitol 5579), Time Won’t Let Me by The Outsiders (Capitol 5573), At The Scene by The Dave Clark Five (Capitol 72324), Michelle by David and Jonathan (Capitol 5563) as well as Nowhere Man by The Beatles and most likely many others.

Did Capitol sell records directly in the carboard jacket?

Capitol sometimes sold records directly in the carboard jacket, but often instead housed their records in generic paper inner sleeves. Some were quite plain while others were very colorful, promoting other albums or at one point, when stereophonic recordings were the new thing, explaining what “stereo” was and how it worked!

When did the Capitol 45 rpm stock company sleeve come out?

78 RPM stock company sleeve from Capitol Toronto Ontario (post 1954) This London Ontario 45 RPM sleeve is pre 1954 and is identical on both sides This London Ontario 45 RPM sleeve is pre 1954 and has slightly different sides This Toronto Ontario 45 RPM sleeve is identical on both sides and appeared after November 1954