Why Leather Rots | Environment & Handling | Potassium Lactate | Dressing; Method | Why Dress? Which Books? | Precautions | How Often? | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Plenderleith 1946 | Acid from air. Lack of salts, | Carefully sponge onto dry leather. Let dry 24 hours, | Rub a little British Museum dressing into the surface. | 1) Retards effects of physical wear; 2) consolidates leather. For vellum: wash quickly, & only when nec; dress lightly, polish quickly. | |||
USDA 1956 (Rogers & Beebe) | Acid in leather; also, lack of oil or grease in leather; but "Dressings do not protect leather against acid decay." | Wrap valuable, little-used books in cloth or put in box. | 6 or 8 different formulas given. Apply snail quantities with hand till no more absorbed. Can use small swab, | More decayed bindings absorb more dressing. Dress or wash to clean the bindings, not to pre- serve then. | "Good judgement must be used," | Every year or two. | |
Newberry 1974 | Acidity; lack of non-tans. | Control heat and humidity. | Thoroughly cover with it but don't saturate. Dry for 1 hour before oiling, | Neatsfoot oil and lanolin, Apply quite liberally with a paint brush. | To lubricate the fiber bundles; & reduce the dusting of the leather, Dress all the leather books, even the powdery ones. | Avoid get- ting oil on paper or cloth; or water on tooling. | Every 2-5 years, depending on heat & humidity. |
Library of Congress leaflet 1975 (scheduled for revision) | Temp 60° -68° & Eli 55-65%. Too low RH is worse than pollution. Keep out of sunlight, Rehumidify when necessary. | Temp 60° -68° & RH 55-65%. Too low RH is worse than pollution. Keep out of sun- light. Rehumidify when necessary. | Apply with damp sponge or cotton-- not dripping, Dry 1 hour. | NFO & L 60/40-no brush. Several thin coats. | Treatment of powdery books is ineffective but does no harm, Never use pot. lac. on vellum or alum- tawed skins. | Avoid over-moistening or friction over gold. Avoid H2O on bad leather. | Every 2-5 years. |
AASLH 1977 | Impurities left in the leather after tanning process or absorbed by leather. | Control excessive heat &light. Keep humidity above 40% so leather won't crack; filter air. | Don't use on very deteriorated leather, Do turnins. Let dry. Repeat treatment occasionally till we learn for sure that once is enough; also after every washing. | NFO & L (but they like vaseline) 60/40, Work well into binding, especially the hinges, but not the turn- ins. | Don't treat with salts or dressing: non-leathers, vellum, alum-tawed leather, or suede. | Protect the text. | Inspect once a year & if dry- looking,
dress. Avoid overoiling. |
Harold James Plenderleith. The Preservation of Leather Bookbindings. London: Printed by order of the Trustees of the British Museum, 1946. 24 pp.
J. S. Rogers and C. W. Beebe. Leather Bookbindings: How to Preserve Them. U.S. Department of Agriculture, 1956, 8 pp. USDA Leaflet No. 398.
Paul N. Banks. Treating Leather Bookbindings. Chicago: The Newberry Library, 1974. Rev. 4 pp.
Preserving Leather Bookbindings. Washington: Library of Congress, 1975. Preservation Leaflet No. 3. 4 pp.
Donald L. DeWitt and Carol Burlinson. Leather Bookbindings: Preservation Techniques. Nashville: American Association for State and Local History, 1977. Technical Leaflet 98. 8 pp