Subject: Permanent markers
Phillip Seitz writes: >On the advice of the Smithsonian (which does everything right as we all >know) we use a layer of soluvar acrylic varnish on the artifact... I think it important to note that Soluvar is a commercial product (and we know what *that* means, don't we, boys and girls)! It was analysed by Scott Williams at CCI in 1978 and found to be based on poly (n-butyl methacrylate). Williams analysed Soluvar again in 1988 and found that it had changed to poly (iso-butyl methacrylate). Bob Feller (1975) has described both resins as Class B materials, with photoaging times of 20-100 years, and prone to cross-linking, although he admitted that he had not seen a sample of Soluvar cross-link. The matting agent in the matte version (which might give better "tooth" for writing on) had also changed from silica to aluminum stearate. (Williams, in CCI Varnish Workshop Handbook, 1994.) Why not use Rohm and Haas Acryloid B72 (ethyl methacrylate/methyl acrylate), which is considered the most stable of the resins we know, instead of a proprietary product? It is just as easy to use, although it takes a little care to prepare. If you are feeling adventurous and pressed for time, Williams reports that Lascaux-Fix (available from art stores) "contains a pure ethyl methacrylate/methyl acrylate copolymer resin like Acryloid B-72." The Varnish Workshop Handbook can be ordered from the Canadian Conservation Institute, and is an excellent successor to Feller Stolow Jones "On Picture Varnishes and their Solvents". Lisa Mibach *** Conservation DistList Instance 8:33 Distributed: Thursday, November 3, 1994 Message Id: cdl-8-33-002 ***Received on Tuesday, 1 November, 1994