Subject: Paulownia storage boxes
Holly Chase <holly.chase [at] sunrider__com> writes >I was wondering if anyone would be willing to share their opinion >about storing antique Chinese scroll paintings in paulownia/pawlonia >wood boxes. Would you recommend this material as safe for scroll >paintings? I am not familiar with the material and have understood >that generally, wood products are acid and tend to off gas yet this >wood is traditionally used to store scroll paintings. When I worked at the University of Hawaii Library I first learned about scroll boxes made of Japanese kiri wood, also known as paulownia, and I had the same concerns about wood being used to house these items. After doing some research, and talking with Japanese Specialists, these wooden boxes are the traditional way to store scrolls, and have been for hundreds of years. There are characteristics that make this wood desirable for constructing boxes that house scrolls: natural resistance to termites, dimensionally stability in the presence of humidity and moisture, low thermal conductivity giving it excellent insulation properties, a resistance to rotting, and an ignition temperature of 420 to 430 degrees Celsius (about twice the ignition temperature of the average hardwood). While at UHM we sent a rare Ryukyu scroll to Japan for conservation work, a year later when the work was completed, the scroll was returned, wrapped in silk inside a new kiri wood box. In my opinion, paulownia boxes are an excellent way to store Chinese or Japanese scrolls. I do not see the need for the insect repellent, especially not knowing the chemical composition of the product. I would keep the boxes and get rid of the repellent. Scott David Reinke Preservation Specialist National Archives and Records Administration Military Personnel Records Center 9700 Page Avenue St. Louis, Missouri 63132-5100 314-801-0904 *** Conservation DistList Instance 21:9 Distributed: Friday, June 8, 2007 Message Id: cdl-21-9-006 ***Received on Sunday, 3 June, 2007