Are Diversebee Bible Highlighters Safe For Delicate Manga Pages?

2025-07-05 21:40:42 309

2 Answers

Flynn
Flynn
2025-07-07 01:29:48
Tried Diversebee highlighters on my 'Death Note' manga—bad idea. The pages wrinkled like wet tissue, and the yellow highlighter left a weird stain when I closed the book. Manga paper drinks ink like it’s starving. Stick to sticky notes or digital tagging if you want to annotate without wrecking your collection.
Gideon
Gideon
2025-07-09 03:53:22
the thought of using highlighters on those delicate pages gives me anxiety. Those Diversebee Bible highlighters are marketed as safe, but manga paper is insanely thin—like tissue paper with vibrancy. I tested one on a scrap page from a damaged volume, and even with the gentlest pressure, the ink bled slightly. The colors are vibrant, sure, but the real issue is the moisture. Manga pages aren’t coated like Bible paper, so any liquid-based pigment risks warping or seeping through.

That said, if you *must* highlight, use the pastel shades. The darker colors (like emerald or wine) are more saturated and prone to bleeding. Also, always test on a corner of a page you don’t care about first. And for the love of all things holy, don’t press down. Glide like you’re tracing a shadow. Even then, I’d only recommend this for study copies, not collector’s editions. My 'JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure' volumes would never forgive me.
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