Subject: Removal of soluble nylon from terracotta
Tony Sigel <asigel [at] fas__harvard__edu> inquires about the removal of soluble nylon from unglazed terracotta. It has been nearly 30 years since I last used this material, and it was falling out of grace at that time but it was the only consolidating material that when applied its solvent wouldn't bleed out the manuscript ink on the object I was trying to keep from crumbling to dust and fibers. The treatment was considered irreversible, which was considered desirable by the client. My memory of this stuff is that it is prepared in hot ethanol and applied while still warm. I have never had an opportunity to try to reverse it, but I guess I would try immersion in hot ethanol IF the item or any related media can tolerate such procedure, or is small enough to be handled in this manner. I would think that anything that might dissolve this stuff would only drive it further into the terracotta. My guess is that it is there to stay and that you might be left with over-painting to mask its saturation. Thomas M. Edmondson Heugh-Edmondson Conservation Services, LLC Kansas City, MO 816-283-0660 *** Conservation DistList Instance 21:13 Distributed: Friday, June 29, 2007 Message Id: cdl-21-13-007 ***Received on Wednesday, 20 June, 2007