not safe for long-term silver jewelry storage unless explicitly labeled
acid-free, sulfur-free, and lignin-free. Standard craft or wool-blend felts emit volatile sulfur compounds that accelerate tarnish—often within days. Replace them with
polyester-based, museum-grade felt or inert alternatives like acrylic foam or archival corrugated board. Always line drawers with
tarnish-inhibiting fabric (e.g., Pacific Silvercloth®) first. Store pieces individually in soft, non-reactive pouches—not loose—even inside dividers. Inspect every 2–3 weeks. Never use rubber bands, adhesives, or cardboard near silver.
The Chemistry Behind Silver Tarnish
Silver tarnishes when exposed to trace amounts of sulfur-containing gases—hydrogen sulfide (H₂S), ozone, or even airborne pollutants from paints, rubber, or wool. Unlike oxidation, this is a surface sulfidation reaction forming black silver sulfide (Ag₂S). It’s not corrosion—but it’s irreversible without polishing, which removes microscopic layers of metal each time.
Why “Soft” Doesn’t Mean “Safe”
Many assume felt is gentle—and it is, physically. But its safety depends entirely on composition. Traditional wool felt contains natural lanolin and sulfur-rich keratin proteins. Even “blended” felts often include recycled fibers contaminated with rubber, dyes, or formaldehyde-based binders—all known tarnish accelerants.

Modern conservation science confirms:
no untreated organic fiber is inert toward silver. The American Institute for Conservation states unequivocally that “wool, silk, felt, and unbuffered paper must be excluded from direct contact with silver objects.” Museum curators use only
polyester needle-punch felt certified to ASTM F2102—a standard measuring sulfur off-gassing over 72 hours. This isn’t caution—it’s chemistry.
Material Comparison: What Works (and What Doesn’t)
| Material | Tarnish Risk | Lifespan in Drawer Use | Key Limitation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard wool/craft felt | ⚠️ High (days to weeks) | <6 months | Releases H₂S; degrades with humidity |
| Polyester needle-punch felt (ASTM F2102) | ✅ Very low (years) | 5+ years | Requires certified supplier—rare in craft stores |
| Archival corrugated board (acid-free, buffered) | ✅ Negligible | 10+ years | Less cushioning; requires precise cutting |
| Rubberized drawer liners | ⚠️ Extreme (hours) | <1 month | Contains sulfur vulcanizing agents |
Debunking the “Just Line It With Felt” Myth
A widespread but dangerous assumption is that any soft, non-abrasive material is safe for silver. This stems from conflating mechanical protection with chemical compatibility. Felt may prevent scratches—but if it emits sulfur, it sacrifices longevity for surface appearance. Worse, tarnish begins invisibly beneath crevices and folds, accelerating where airflow is lowest: exactly where jewelry rests against felt. That’s why “more padding” is never better—material purity matters more than thickness.
Proven Best Practices for Silver Storage
- 💡 Test before committing: Place a clean silver coin in your drawer with the divider for 72 hours. If it darkens at contact points, discard the material.
- ⚠️ Avoid “silver polishing cloths” as dividers: Their embedded abrasives and anti-tarnish chemicals degrade with repeated folding and cause micro-scratches.
- ✅ Layer your system: Base layer = Pacific Silvercloth® or 3M Anti-Tarnish Strips; secondary layer = ASTM-certified polyester felt; individual items = breathable cotton muslin pouches (never plastic).
- ✅ Control environment: Keep relative humidity below 40% and store away from bathrooms, kitchens, and exterior walls—where sulfur and moisture concentrate.

Long-Term Maintenance Is Simpler Than You Think
Once correctly configured, maintenance takes under five minutes monthly: lift each pouch, check for discoloration at seams, wipe dividers with a dry microfiber cloth, and replace anti-tarnish strips every 6–12 months. This beats weekly polishing—and preserves value. Remember: tarnish prevention is passive protection; tarnish removal is active loss.
Everything You Need to Know
Can I wash felt drawer dividers to make them safer for silver?
No. Washing does not remove sulfur compounds bound in fibers or neutralize acidic residues. It may even accelerate off-gassing by disturbing stabilizers. Replacement—not cleaning—is the only reliable solution.
Are velvet-lined trays safe for silver?
Only if labeled “museum-grade,” “sulfur-free,” and “acid-free.” Most retail velvet is silk- or rayon-blend with dye fixatives that contain copper or iron—both catalytic for tarnish. When in doubt, use trays lined with Pacific Silvercloth® instead.
Does storing silver in airtight plastic boxes help?
It can backfire. Trapped moisture + residual plasticizers (like phthalates) creates a corrosive microclimate. Use ventilated, lined wooden boxes—or sealed containers with desiccant + anti-tarnish strips, monitored quarterly.
Will anti-tarnish strips damage other metals like gold or platinum?
No. These strips (e.g., 3M™ or Intercept™) release no vapors harmful to noble metals. They’re specifically formulated to bind sulfur *before* it contacts silver—making them safe and effective across mixed-metal collections.



