Subject: Book with sticky cover
Helen McPherson <hmcpherson [at] slv__vic__gov__au> writes >Conservation staff at the State Library of Victoria have received an >enquiry re a suitable housing for a book which has a black, high >gloss cover. ... >... >It would appear that a vinyl type of material with a cloth or foam >backing has been used to cover the boards. The vinyl marks easily >when handled, and is sticky to the touch. ... >... >... The only material which doesn't seem to stick is >silicone release paper. Although the owner has not handled the book >very much, a crack has already appeared in the vinyl surface at the >board joint. ... I would suggest that the material you are describing, rather than vinyl, could easily be pyroxylin, (nitrocellulose), which was widely used variously to fill, impregnate, or coat, bookcloth. As a bookcloth filler it would be present in the thickness/concentration necessary to break down on the boards. If it was merely a waterproof coating for a (starch?) filled cloth, one supposes it could be selectively removed using appropriate solvents, but thin coatings of nitrocellulose are relatively stable and very common. Bookcloth was still being sold as pyroxylin coated less than 20 years ago; similar material is now described as acrylic coated. I have had this problem with stationery bindings in archival collections, have had some success with application of microcrystalline wax, and, as you report, silicone paper, but did not see either/both as a permanent solution. If the material is pyroxylin, cold dry storage as used for nitrate film may be the only solution if retention of the cover is mandatory. James Elwing Conservator, Archives Powerhouse Museum PO Box K436 Haymarket NSW1238 Sydney, Australia *** Conservation DistList Instance 18:43 Distributed: Monday, March 14, 2005 Message Id: cdl-18-43-007 ***Received on Thursday, 10 March, 2005