Subject: X-radiography and watermarks
The following appeared on Exlibris and is reposted here with permission. Date: 11 Jan 94 Sender: Rare Books and Special Collections Forum <EXLIBRIS [at] RUTVM1__BITNET> From: Daniel J. Slive <dslive [at] brownvm__bitnet> Subject: X-radiography and watermarks Readers of this list may be interested in the following excerpt from the notes section of the December 1993 Print Quarterly, p. 402-403: X-Radiography and Rembrandt. The Rijksmuseum now occupies a leading role in the examination of watermarks in paper, and has already reached some important new conclusions concerning Rembrandt's etchings. The spur to progress has been given by recent technical developments that allow watermarks to be X-radiographed much faster than before. Developed by the dentist and collector H.M.M. van Hugten in association with the print dealer Theo Laurentius, the new technology can produce a photographic negative of a watermark in around two and a half minutes by using "soft X-rays": an emission of as little as 7kV at 15mA through the paper onto a film, exposed for about 150 seconds, produces a clear and publishable image. Previously, the best results were through beta-radiography, which requires an exposure of several hours. [Two paragraphs on Rembrandt research results (editions, states, etc) deleted.] The fruits of this research will become more precisely defined as more prints are examined. An interim progress report appeared in the Bulletin van het Rijksmuseum, XL,1993, pp. 353-384 (with an English summary on pp. 417-420), and further, more detailed results are promised soon. *** Conservation DistList Instance 7:50 Distributed: Wednesday, January 12, 1994 Message Id: cdl-7-50-017 ***Received on Wednesday, 12 January, 1994