Subject: Drying by freezing
Charlotte Tancin <ct0u+ [at] andrew__cmu__edu> writes >The director of the center... >asked whether these >boxes of wet paper would dry simply by being left in the freezer >long enough--and if that works, how long does it take, and are there >drawbacks to this approach. In reply to Charlotte Tancin's inquiry about freezing wet documents and letting them dry in the freezer, I did this (inadvertently) with some wet books that I stuck in a refrigerator freezer and forgot about for over a year. Yes, they did in fact dry, but it took a very long time. They still had a few little wet spots (all full of ice crystals) when I finally remembered to retrieve them. Also, of course, the paper got very ripply in the process. But, for having been soaking wet, they did dry quite nicely. They would have done better if I'd taken them out sooner, air-dried them a little and weighted them to de-ripple the paper a little. Single-sheet documents will dry nicely if you can hang them with clothespins from a clothesline in a place with good air circulation--e.g., a fan. You don't want to do that if they're so wet that their weight will tear them, of course. They need to be less than soaking. They will be crinkly once they've dried, though, so won't ever look quite the same and will take up more space in file drawers. If these are documents without artifactual value, once they're dry you'd probably be better off making photocopies and discarding the originals. If you must keep the originals, you'll have to live with at least some visible water damage. Hope this helps a little. You certainly have my sympathy. Drying paper is a slow process! P.S. Don't freeze photographs. They'll just glue themselves together. Jeanne Eichelberger Binghamton, NY *** Conservation DistList Instance 9:60 Distributed: Monday, March 4, 1996 Message Id: cdl-9-60-012 ***Received on Wednesday, 14 February, 1996