Subject: Deacidification
Jack C. Thompson <tcl [at] teleport__com> writes >Juliette Murphy <juliettemurphy [at] dali-estate__org> writes > >>... The >>deacidification spray that has been recommended to our paper >>specialist has proved to be inadequate for the task required. I >>would like to ask what other paper conservators might recommend. > >... >When it is possible, I prefer washing the paper to remove the >detritus of degradation which will re-hydrate the cellulose fibers >and strengthen the sheet (renew hydrogen bonding), and then apply a >deacidification treatment. I agree with Jack here. Washing can often result in a significant improvement in many qualities of paper (Vincent Daniels demonstrated this in an article published from the Cambridge 1980 papers). You might want to review Anne Lienardy and Philippe van Damme's article on paper washing in the Paper Conservator, v. 14, 1990; washing requires specific knowledge of the the paper type and condition as well as ink and colorant stability. If you still feel you need to deacidify, then please review Margaret Hey's wonderful article "The washing and aqueous deacidification of paper" in the Paper Conservator, v. 4 1979. Identifying the nature of the degradation of the paper and what strategies have been used to address them is important. On the other hand non-aqueous strategies like those discussed by L.R. Green and M. Leese in Restaurator, v 12, 1991 might be helpful as well. On the other hand, placement of deacidification compounds in the paper structure may not result in the outcome you desire, this problem is discussed by George Kelly and Stanley Fowler in the JAIC, v. 17, 1978 and was noted earlier by Mervyn Ruggles in the IIC-AG-1971 article he produced. The question often is not appearance, but paper permanence which Adel Koura and Thomas Krause addressed in an article in The Conservation of Library and Archive Materials and the Graphic Arts in Cambridge in 1980. You might also want to review issues of the Abbey Newsletter/Paper Preservation on the problems of washing and deacidification. Niccolo Caldararo Chief Conservator Conservation Art Service San Francisco, CA *** Conservation DistList Instance 21:17 Distributed: Saturday, July 21, 2007 Message Id: cdl-21-17-005 ***Received on Sunday, 15 July, 2007