Subject: Circulating collection repairs Imidazole
I've got two completely unrelated questions here. The first has to do with a circulating collections repair--new spines for cloth cases. The case is otherwise OK, endsheets intact, super intact -- just torn or weakened cloth in the hinge, or torn cloth at head/tail. We've been doing this repair as described in the Morrow/Dyal book, which is to say, we don't clean the spine of the old super and glue, we just make a new cloth spine (and mount the old one when its possible). Now I've got one of the second year Columbia students, Ursula Wille, working for me here, and she has told me that at Wisconsin, they did remove the super and completely cleaned the spines, put a new muslin lining across and onto the outside of the boards, then a paper lining, and then attached the new cloth spine. Well, this seems to me to make what would otherwise be a 10-15 minute repair into a 40 minute repair, and I'm curious to know: are other menderies doing this? Do they feel it is cost effective? (and if so, how much are they paying their technicians?) Do people out there have any opinions one way or another on this? The other question is from Ursula and her fellow student, Emily Ramos so I'll just put her on... As part of our ongoing research project on the treatment of water-damaged leather bindings, we have been reading about the use of imidazole as a humectant and buffer in conjunction with a lubricant for leather. We would like to find out if anyone has read about or used imidazole on bookbinding leather, and what your experiences were. Best, Miranda Martin, Teachers College, NYC *** Conservation DistList Instance 4:41 Distributed: Wednesday, January 30, 1991 Message Id: cdl-4-41-003 ***Received on Tuesday, 29 January, 1991