Subject: Soluble nylon
Kathleen Magill <tcrnkma [at] ucl__ac__uk> writes >For my dissertation, I'm interested in assessing and re-evaluating >soluble nylon as a consolidant for vegetable fibres, with a focus on >objects made with raffia elements. Has anyone had experience with >application of this consolidant, particularly on plant fibres? If >so, how do evaluate the result? Did it age well? Has it remained >flexible/colourless, etc? Have you noticed any changes through time? I am somewhat surprised that soluble nylon is being reconsidered for conservation of organic material. Initially, when it came into use, soluble nylon was considered not only stable, but also completely reversible, and was therefore extremely popular. It later turned out that while originally reversible, it cross-links within a few years, and become irreversible with a tendency to yellow. It has completely gone out of use in Australia in the late 1970s, and unless I have missed some new modifications of its chemistry, I think it should definitely remain so. I have worked with two large collections of Australian Aboriginal artefacts that were extensively treated with soluble nylon during the 1970s. Most of the treated objects are bark paintings--they are definitely stable, in as much that you can throw them around and nothing will happen to them--their surface looks like plastic, and feels like plastic. In some cases the pigment seems to have continued flaking after application, but it is held rigidly in place within the by now non-soluble nylon. The only way I ever found of getting rid of soluble nylon was when a few barks stored in a drawer were flooded as a result of a leak in the plumbing system during a weekend, and by the time they were identified and arrived for treatment, they had grown a thick layer of mould and fungi--on that occasion, it was possible to peel-off most of the soluble nylon which largely detached from the painted image, but I wouldn't recommend it as a standard method :-) Smadar Gabrieli objects conservator *** Conservation DistList Instance 21:3 Distributed: Thursday, May 10, 2007 Message Id: cdl-21-3-007 ***Received on Sunday, 29 April, 2007