Subject: Coating for wood
We have been contacted by a local maritime museum who wants to know how to best preserve the wooden stock of an anchor on display in their front yard. It is oak, from an 18th or 19th century vessel excavated in the 1970's. It was not treated, just desalinated and air-dried, then coated with what appears to be a tar-based product and put on display with little or no maintenance. The coating has failed, and the wood is cracked, dirty, and beginning to rot. Moving the anchor in-doors is not an option, but they will be doing clean-up and other maintenance to remove some of the stress on the wood. We would like to recommend a new coating that will seal the surface from weather and further rot--does anyone have any suggestions? I was particularly curious about some of the preservative solutions sold for house restoration (they seem to be mostly consolidating resins with fungicides?). Or should they go with good old Thompson's Water Seal, and perform annual maintenance? Howard Wellman Lead Conservator Maryland Archaeological Conservation Laboratory Jefferson Patterson Park and Museum 410-586-8577 Fax: 410-586-3643 *** Conservation DistList Instance 14:48 Distributed: Thursday, March 22, 2001 Message Id: cdl-14-48-016 ***Received on Monday, 5 March, 2001