How to Protect Resin Collectibles from UV Light
UV light is the number-one cause of colour fading and yellowing in resin figures. Here's how to protect your collection without sacrificing display appeal.
UV radiation is invisible but relentless. A figure displayed near a window will noticeably fade within two to three years. The same figure in a UV-protected cabinet could look identical in twenty years. Entirely preventable.
Why UV Damages Resin Collectibles
UV photons break chemical bonds in paint pigments — a one-way process that cannot be reversed. UV also yellows and embrittles resin over extended exposure. Sources: direct sunlight (strongest) and older fluorescent lighting.
Rule One: No Direct Sunlight
Never display figures where direct sunlight falls on them at any point during the day. A few hours of daily sun accumulates significant UV damage within months.
UV-Filtering Glass
Standard cabinet glass transmits most UV. UV-filtering glass (museum glass) blocks 98–99% of UV. Retrofit UV window film is an affordable alternative for existing cabinets.
LED Lighting Guide
- Choose LEDs with CRI 90+
- Avoid cool white 5000K+ LEDs — higher UV component
- 2700K–3000K warm white LEDs are safest for collectibles
- Never use halogen spotlights inside cabinets — heat and UV
Practical Positioning
- Best: interior room, LED lighting, UV-glass cabinet
- Good: any room, LEDs, figures away from windows
- Acceptable: near window with UV-filter film on glass
- Avoid: windowsill or any shelf receiving direct sun
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