What to do with old inner sleevs after cleaning?


Hi
I know that after cleaning record you suppose to place it in a new inner jacket,prefferably made of rice paper and/or consisting of several plies of paper/plastic combination.I have MoFI sleeves and Goldring sleeves for that.My question is:what do you usualy do with old inner sleeves?Some of them have grafics/art,texts and additional info.I tried putting them alongside new inner sleeves but not all of them fit.Some are made of thick quality paper and cannot easily slide into the record sleeve thus causing huge headache when you putting the record away after playing it.
Also,some records have regular paper inner sleeves that contain only record label logos.If i throw them away,does it devalue the record as a collectible item?
I am afraid to devalue the record in case later i want to sell it but would hate to file away and index the old dusty inner sleevs for that purpose.
I would appreciate if you share your experiences regarding it.Thanks a lot!
overhang
all sleeves become somewhat dusty, but quality sleeves should protect records just fine. if they are visually inferior, change them. if not, i wouldn't worry to much about changing each time you clean a record. the mpfi sleeves are excellent, and last longer than most.
Careful: Contrarian replying here. I re-use most of my poly-lined sleeves that are in good condition, I replace all paper only sleeves or sleeves in bad condition or sleeves that are only the really soft plastic (from the 50s). I keep my EMI, Decca, Lyrita and many other LPs that came with good quality sleeves in those original sleeves.

I know this does not follow the collective conventional wisdom on this topic. But I clean every LP I purchase, I've never found that re-using the sleeves adversely impacts the thousands of LPs that I've cleaned and that are on my shelves. I know the concerns over leaching plasticizers, etc., etc., from the old poly, and I've heard the war stories. But I've never encountered it in any of my LPs in over 30 years of collecting vinyl, included lots of used LPs that have been sitting in some of those sleeves for 40 years or more. (Comment: if you wet clean your LPs, make sure they are *completely* dry before putting them back into any sleeve. Newly cleaned but still damp LPs going into a plastic lined jacket has been the most frequent cause of problems I've seen friends encounter.)

If I replace a sleeve (and I replace quite a few), I trhow away generic sleeves. If the sleeve has any graphics or text related to the album, I keep it with the record in the jacket.
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Jaybo, I didn't see your post before I hit the key on mine. Sounds like we are of somewhat similar mind on this topic.

Cheers,
I also tend to keep and reuse decent quality inner sleeves, rather than replace them with new MoFi sleeves, (like I do with the crappy cheap paper sleeves that come with some LPs.) However, if you wish to keep the inner sleeve because it has decorations, or lyrics, or whatever on it, my suggestion is to use an outer sleeve bag, and merely put the inner sleeve along side the LP inside the bag. That way you'll never lose it.

My two cents worth.
Overhang, I do more or less what Kurt tank does, except that if I'm dealing with an older record, I put the record in a new inner sleeve AND outer sleeve, then put that, along with the original outer sleeve, into one of the clear plastic sleeves, in order to preserve the original outer sleeve (and here I'm talking about outer sleeves that are starting to split or otherwise fall apart, etc). (A lot of different sleeves involved there...)

What I probably SHOULD do is stop buying all those sleeves and save the money and use it for some visits to a shrink...

Seriously, although I have had some similar worries that the records might lose their value if I throw away their original inner sleeves, the fact is that most records, even the ones we love dearly, have very limited value resale value, and I have NEVER seen any of the record sellers I deal with try to pump up the value of their merchandise, even the really rare and expensive stuff, with the notation "Contains Original Inner Sleeve!!!" I confess that I do save them sometimes, if they're amusing, but have become pretty cavalier about tossing them into the recycle bin.
What I meant was the plain white ones, they have no value and are best recycled. Those that have historical graphics, like the Atlantic and Atco ones from the 70s, are sometimes fun to see the other album covers for records released at that time. But this is for conversation and fun and I agree that they do not add to the resale value, at least yet.