Subject: Conservation treatment guidelines
Local governments in New York State use a variety of vendors to conserve their bound records. Some treatments are standard, others include questionable materials and practices. As part of a general booklet on conserving bound volumes that we are developing, we would like to include a set of guidelines/specifications/best practices that local governments can use to judge the quality of the work from the different vendors. We are looking for as specific information as possible. For instance, that re-enforcing of paper should be done with Japanese tissue and not cerex nylon. If am wondering if others have developed any such treatment guidelines, and if so would they be willing to share them with me. **** Moderator's comments: In a followup message Prudence offered additional background: Some of our vendors tell our patrons that all paper is acidic and fragile and that all pre-20th century ink is iron-gall, therefore they must always disbind, deacidify, and re-enforce every page. They get the governments to buy into rebinding with leather and gold tooling as well. Clearly some of these practices are unnecessary and as I mentioned some of the treatments are at best questionable, some we know (like using cerex nylon) are harmful. One of our problems is we can't just tell the governments to be sure the processes are reversible since the vendors are telling them it is without telling them all the chemicals they have to use to reverse the glues. We'd ideally like to set up some acceptable parameters. Thank your for your assistance, Prudence Backman Local Government Archival Advisory Services New York State Archives and Records Administration 518-474-4372 Fax: 518-473-4941 *** Conservation DistList Instance 10:13 Distributed: Thursday, July 25, 1996 Message Id: cdl-10-13-002 ***Received on Wednesday, 24 July, 1996