Subject: Mold on books
I was recently appointed executive director of a 50-room limestone country house undergoing major restoration; many of its original furnishings and household collections are still in situ, including a multi-room library. It has been hot, muggy and spore-full this summer; we have had an eruption of black mold, currently even more worrisome than a pre-existing condition with English white mold that is/can be semi-contained; both result from major humidity and dampness issues house-wide that have yet to be resolved. We have some very significant early books on display in our library rooms; most are leather bound, many with slipsheeted illustration plates over etchings printed with iron gall ink that have extensively browned through their own pages and slips. I see black mold forming along the base of spines, on top of bound pages, and when I pull a volume, there is a dusty dark film over the cover that while not black, certainly appears to me to be mold. My collections manager, who is very part time but has a self-taught interest in books, disagrees that we should remove these book from their shelves in the house to a dryer external location. Her argument is that moving them will be more injurious than leaving them there; the house is unheated in the winter and will freeze solid for at least a month, thus killing the mold. My argument is that if the books are themselves damp through, as evidenced by the ink corrosion, and the mold is there, and we have a serious case of unmitigated humidity in the rooms, freezing and thawing and refreezing and thawing will only exacerbate the damage already sustained. Furniture surfaces are also suffering, but that's another question for another time. Thoughts, please? Alice Smith Duncan Hyde Hall Cooperstown NY 13316 *** Conservation DistList Instance 19:10 Distributed: Wednesday, August 17, 2005 Message Id: cdl-19-10-031 ***Received on Wednesday, 10 August, 2005