Subject: Leafcasting
This month the first leafcasting machine to be built by the original creator, Esther Alkalay Boyd (b. Stella Alkalaj) outside the former Soviet block is to be retired after 31 years of service. The machine was built in 1971 at the conservation laboratories at the Jewish National and University Library, Jerusalem, which Esther established in 1969. This machine was a development of previous machines Esther developed in Sofia, Bulgaria, where she also established the laboratory at the National Library in 1956. In all Esther built four machines in Sofia based on an initial idea of using pulp testing machines used in paper mills, suggested by Yulia Petrovna Nyuksha of St. Petersburg. In Israel Esther built another 5 machines, which she considered to be a considerable improvement to the original Bulgarian models. These were sold to The Library of Congress, New England Centre Document Conservation, The National Archives in Paris, University Library in Cambridge and one which was sold to a private conservation studio in England but finally ended up in the British Library. These machines are the forerunners of most of the commercial machines available today. A separate machine was developed in 1978 by J. Franklin Mowery at the Folger Shakespeare Library and was based on hand and electronically operated machines he observed in Germany and Austria in 1972 and 1976. These German and Austrian machines were developed from observations and photographs of the original Bulgarian machines taken by Joseph Ries when he visited Esther Alkalay Boyd in Sofia in 1967. At the Jewish National and University Library we have being operating Esther's original machine since 1971 without the application of tissue lining, computer calculation or square counting or any additional application of adhesive apart from a small quantity of methylcellulose added to the water to give a slight size to the new paper. We consider it to be a very useful tool in certain areas of our work but not a mass solution to all our problems. The success of the repair--evidence of which is to be seen in the Library's collection over the past 30 years--relies on our correct pulp preparation from a Hollander beater using cotton linters, linen paper and Kraft cellulose (for tone) and the subsequent Hydrogen and mechanical bonds the fibers form. The experience of the conservators who have worked with the machine also contributes to the correct judgment of pulp consistency and quantity. Now, in development by Tova Szeintuch (Head of Conservation, JNUL) and with the advice of Esther Alkalay Boyd and Ilana Kesler (Conservator, JNUL), we have a new leafcasting machine built by an Israeli engineering firm, "Ravona", which is a slight modernization of the original design. Our original machine can now rest and take its place in the history of the development of this useful conservation technique. Anyone who would like to see pictures of the original machine or the newly built version can contact Tova Szeintuch directly, also the firm who built our new machine is interested to produce more on demand. Neill McManus Conservator Jewish National and University Library Jerusalem, Israel. *** Conservation DistList Instance 16:33 Distributed: Thursday, November 14, 2002 Message Id: cdl-16-33-011 ***Received on Thursday, 14 November, 2002