Subject: Illuminations
In Conservation DistList Instance: 15:70 Tuesday, April 16, 2002, Patricia Mouraud requested advice on illuminations "covered" with silk, probably silk cover sheets or interleaving materials, historically sewn along the top or left margin to prevent abrasions of the design layer, rather than manuscripts laminated with silk. Deborah Evetts (Pierpont Morgan Library) lectured on this subject at the "Professional talks" of the 1997 ANAGPIC conference, hosted by NYU. Unlike laminating material, these sewn cover sheets have historical value, thus presenting a genuine curatorial concern. The cover sheets can be lifted to reveal the underlying illustrations, but this creates difficulty for exhibitions and repeated handling damages the textiles. To remove the silk is to remove a part of the artifact, so the documentation should be very thorough, no matter which treatment is selected. I'm sorry that I cannot suggest an adequate replacement interleaf or a treatment for silk. It may be useful to talk to Abigail Quandt (Walters Art gallery) and other manuscript conservators, to find out what protocol they have for preserving original or historic interleaving materials. Valinda Carroll Marshall Steel Postgraduate Intern in Paper Conservation Colonial Williamsburg Foundation *** Conservation DistList Instance 15:72 Distributed: Tuesday, April 23, 2002 Message Id: cdl-15-72-004 ***Received on Monday, 22 April, 2002