Subject: Housing labs Exhibition space pH meters Visitors to BYU
Your housing lab sounds great. If you did all the planning and ordering in only a week and a half you can be proud. Planning labs seems to be one of the more time consuming activities we get into, and there is always the fear that some critical detail has been overlooked, and there won't be electricity or paint on the walls. Actually I think a "housing lab" is an idea whose time has come (maybe I'm a little behind on all this). It makes so much sense to have an operation just dedicated to this, gives housing an identity and sense of importance and increases its visibility. It also favors the specialization of labor which I think is increasing necessary if we are to get anything done. We haven't created a housing lab per se, but we have those operations increasingly manned by students trained to do just those operations, and they are doing a great job. But the idea of a special lab for this really appeals to me, to better organize these operations and to RECOGNIZE them as another main component of conservation services. I suppose the phase section at LC was sort of the precursor of this idea, but its application in research libraries is really perfect, especially if you can train a cadre of students to man it. The repetitive nature of the operations seem to lend themselves well to students, without huge demands of training. Anyway I'm just telling you what you already know, but I applaud your efforts. By the way, I too once had one of those awful hickock wooden lying presses, which was here when I arrived, and which I actually used for a couple of years, plough and all. That is what drove me to make my own. I like those German numbers, even if the plough is a bit funky. I used it at Columbia last spring when I was giving a workshop and I was surprised that the plough was made out of a hard abs-type plastic, which binds with the friction of moving it. Not the best choice of materials. Otherwise they really seem to be well made. **** Moderator's comments: The idea of a housing lab is hardly new, but we still, I fear, have a way to go in determining the way in which such a beast should function. Matters of supervision, Q/C, training, impact on conventional treatment operations etc. need a great deal of consideration. Particularly worrisome to me is the tendency of such an operation to develop a sort of autonomy within a dept, with corresponding loss of control, much as similar operations do when they are allowed to develop outside a conservation dept (i.e. housing programs in library depts or branch library). Physical proximity to a conservation lab, doesn't guarantee close interaction between the respective staffs. (Similar concerns apply to basic repair operations). Our own proposed housing lab (I don't know yet whether it will be approved, and if so to what extent) is not fully 'planned'. That is, we have not yet worked out the details of how the operation might proceed (why fuss until the cash is in hand?). As for the polypress, we have requested funds to get one and I'm keeping my fingers crossed. They do, however, seem awfully expensive; I've been trying to bring a new exhibition area up to standards and it has been consuming all my energies since I got back. My boss (Associate University Librarian) who has been behind us from the start and is really the guy who calls the shots here, is also famous for forging ahead with an idea without consulting anyone. This time he got the money to create a new exhibition area out of one of the lounges. By the time he involved me, the cases were already built and most of the design features spec'd out. Now I am trying to "change a few things" without seeming to second guess my boss or make too many enemies with the physical plant people. Typical institutional fare. I have actually learned a ....-load about the exhibition angle, mostly because I was so ignorant, and there is nothing like doing it to educate one fast. Since we are planning a new building in a few years, this was a good exercise to warm me up I'm learning what not to build display cases out of and how tricky it is to find decent materials. I hate to do things in a retrofit fashion, but welcome to life. Nathan Stolow's new Butterworth's book has helped as has Thompson's Museum Environment. I even did a seach on the Getty which was helpful. I am using our librarian here to do my searches because she specializes in computer searches and is so much more efficient than I am. When I watch here maneuver around during the search I realize how much it helps to have general experience with databases. You probably have no trouble with this, but it is not somethin g I have spent enough time with. I too have been thinking of the possible utility of a pH/ise meter, and have a feeling they could be useful to us. My Orion has been nice, but it already had to be sent back to the manuf. for a new capacitor. The other side of fancy circuitry. I am assuming this was just one of those electronic flukes--the kind that happen within the first several hours of use if they are going to happen at all. I have gotten use to the portable and like the LED and all the snappy features. This week we are having a lot of guests. I invited Barbara Meierjames to come out and do her mending workshop on Friday and Saturday as an in-house workshop, and also because we have been good friends since my LC days and I wanted to get her to come for a visit. Laura Wait also wanted to come and visit this summer so she decided to come for the workshop and a couple extra days--she just walked in a minute ago. And my old assistant who just finished the Columbia program, Terry Siebach, is also coming out from New York to combine the workshop with job interviews here. We hope to have her back on by October. It is going to be a fun week, starting today. It has been a nice summer with several visitors, Simon Green in early July after BPI, and Cathy Baker on her way to SF. *** Conservation DistList Instance 2:4 Distributed: Sunday, August 21, 1988 Message Id: cdl-2-4-002 ***Received on Sunday, 21 August, 1988