Subject: Photographic documentation of mold-damaged postcards
Karen Potje <kpotje [at] cca__qc__ca> writes >Does anyone have suggestions on how we can photograph, photocopy or >microfilm a collection of about 2,300 mouldy postcards without risk >of contaminating work areas, equipment, other collections materials, >or the photographer? Color xeroxing does an excellent job as an inexpensive quick method of copying postcards; you can enlarge them easily as they are copied and can do more than one at a time to save time and expense. The color isn't precise but detail is captured very well. However, I wouldn't recommend copying them through a plastic bag, as that would degrade the image. Moreover, if you were not going to treat the postcards, keeping them in a plastic bag would just make the mold worse unless they were frozen. If you do have a freezer available, use of a ziplock type plastic bag would be an option for storage until treatment of selected items was needed (as they were called for by researchers). Gary D. Saretzky Coordinator, Public History Internship Program, Rutgers University; Archivist, Monmouth County, New Jersey; Chair, NJ Caucus, Mid-Atlantic Regional Archives Conference *** Conservation DistList Instance 12:43 Distributed: Thursday, November 12, 1998 Message Id: cdl-12-43-008 ***Received on Tuesday, 10 November, 1998