Subject: Bookcloth
Due to the demise of starch-filled buckrams, our book repair unit is considering a switch to the newer poly/cotton fabrics with aqueous coating that the mills offer to binderies. However, our book repair assistants do not like the way these new fabrics work. The new fabrics are much more difficult to handle--among other problems, they take longer to stick. The fabric mill representatives (Hollistan and ICG), the adhesives folks (U.S. Adhesives Co.) and our bindery's supply company (Gane Brothers) all say that the reason it doesn't stick as quickly is that polyester fibers are not as absorbent as cotton (the adhesive is not absorbed as quickly when you press buckram and board or paper together.) So they suggest that we need a different adhesive since we changed from starch-filled all-cotton buckrams to the acrylic coated poly-cotton buckrams. The adhesive company our bindery uses is willing to work with us in order to develop an adhesive that will work better with the new buckrams. At this time we mix up our PVA (Jade 403) with methylcellulose and wheat paste to get water-reversibility, longer working time, and smoother application. As a starting point, the adhesives scientists were sent a sample of our adhesive mix and analyzed it. The adhesives company has just sent us a couple quarts of two types of different PVA's that should duplicate the qualities of our adhesive mix as best they can physically, but with what they believe to be the appropriate improvements, i.e., a greater solids percentage, and water solubility at the outset. Of course this is all without site-testing. We are doing that this week. The only difference (on the spec sheets that accompanied each sample) between the 2 samples is that one is a co-polymer and one is a homo-polymer. They seem to meet all LBI standards other than that. I still haven't decided to stay with the new buckrams and might switch to the more expensive fabrics that Bookmaker's carries, but I thought I would give the industry fellows a chance to sell me on their interest in our meager book repair business. They "don't want to lose us as customers" so right now they are willing to work on getting something we will like. "Us" meaning all book-repair people out there. (Well, I did say there were dozens of us doing this and we were all in the same boat with the loss of starch-filled buckrams.) So my questions: Have you tried the new poly/cotton aqueous coated fabrics? (The version that Industrial Coatings Group manufactures is called Optima) Do you like them? Which PVA are you using? Do you mix anything with it, and what? What other replacement for starch-filled buckram have you found that works as well for book repairs such as spine replacements? I greatly appreciate any feedback you can give. Ann Frellsen Preservation Office Emory University Libraries Atlanta, GA 404-727-0307 Fax: 404-727-0053 *** Conservation DistList Instance 10:48 Distributed: Monday, November 18, 1996 Message Id: cdl-10-48-014 ***Received on Friday, 15 November, 1996