Color printing sometimes does, but the black printing on newspapers usually will not fade. The paper, especially that made of highly acidic wood pulp, will turn yellow as it oxidizes due to sunlight.
Sunlight can fade both books and magazines, but magazines are typically printed on lower quality paper that is more susceptible to fading. The ink and paper used in magazines are usually less resistant to UV light compared to the materials used in books.
Books, This is because magazines have a protective sheen on them which books lack.
The black ink used in newspapers is generally pretty resistant to fading, but the colored inks are not and fade pretty readily. Even most of the black inks will fade to some degree in time.
To create a graph comparing the effect of sunlight on paper in books vs. magazines, you can measure the extent of fading over time using a spectrophotometer or colorimeter. Take regular readings at fixed intervals and plot the data on a graph with time on the x-axis and fading intensity on the y-axis for both books and magazines to visualize and compare the impact of sunlight on paper in each.
It's because the sunlight decolor the colored paper. The sunlight makes the color of paper to another color.
because it has too much miosture.
the ink will soon fade, the rubber will lose its strechiness and the paper will stay white
No
There are many good drapery fabrics that don't fade in the sunlight. Examples of good drapery fabrics that don't fade in the sunlight includes silk fabrics and woven fabrics.
It Depends on the furniture but if it is in direct sunlight it may fade.
Lemon juice can cause colors to fade in the presence of sunlight due to the acidity in the lemons. The sun and acid combination will cause the first layer of skin to fade away, and the skin underneath is lighter.
because of the exposure to sunlight
Because of sunlight hitting it takes out some of the colour
well red fades the faster
Fade it's colors