Subject: Deterioration within enclosures
Just a couple of thoughts to add to this thread. It may help to think of a picture frame (or exhibit case) as a pump, cycling air (and air-borne particulates) in and out at low differential pressure boundaries (the crack or split in wood backings) as temperature/%RH change over time. The temperature inside a frame may be considerably higher than the temperature of the room it is in (light [including infrared] bounces around behind the glass before if refracts out; longer under plexiglas),and it is this heat differential which creates a pressure differential, turning the frame into a pump, expelling air during the day (or display period) and sucking it back in at night, taking the path of least resistance. In this instance, the split shingle. Jack C. Thompson Thompson Conservation Laboratory *** Conservation DistList Instance 6:54 Distributed: Thursday, April 15, 1993 Message Id: cdl-6-54-002 ***Received on Monday, 12 April, 1993