Subject: Glue sticks
In answer to Meredith's query about glue sticks: I too had the same curiosity about them. I hand printed a book (on an 1820s handpress) and had to glue in an erratum slip (to my embarrassment). I didn't want to use anything that was not archival. I wrote to the Avery Company about their glue sticks (which we had in the department) to ask if their glue was archival. I asked specifically, "What is the pH of the adhesive?" They sent me a letter in which they said only that they don't give out their glue formula to anyone. I wrote back saying that I didn't want their formula; all I wanted was the pH of the glue. They wrote back that the glue's pH was 10. This seemed awfully high to me, but I have smeared some out on paper and used a pH testing pen (admittedly not a very scientific test) and it shows alkalinity. I consulted with a couple of conservators who told me that it might not be good to use such an alkaline glue because its color might not evolve the same way that the color will on the paper it is stuck to. That is, the spot where the glue is might show in color variation somewhere down the pike. Another conservator told me that the glue is safe--not acidic--but that he prefers the Uhu glue sticks, which, he said, had a better glue. [I don't recall the reason it was "better."] Sid Berger Head of Special Collections Univ. of Calif. Riverside Sidney E. Berger Head of Special Collections Rivera Library University of California Riverside, CA 92517 909-787-3233 Fax: 909-787-3285 *** Conservation DistList Instance 10:15 Distributed: Friday, August 2, 1996 Message Id: cdl-10-15-002 ***Received on Friday, 2 August, 1996