Volume 10, Number 3
Jun 1986
New Directions in Paper Conservation
The Institute of Paper Conservation celebrated its tenth
anniversary with an international conference at Oxford, England,
from the 14th to the 18th of April, entitled "New Directions in
Paper Conservation." the conference was followed by three days of
tours on April 20, 22 and 23, to three East Anglian workshops
(Cockerell, McAusland, and Pickwoad), Barcham Green and Leeds
Castle, and Camberwell and the National Maritime Museum. About 600
people came, from over 25 countries, including over 100 from the
U.S.
Over 100 papers were given in four days of concurrent sessions.
the three lecture halls booked for the purpose were sometimes very
crowded, impossible to squeeze into if you did not get there early.
Lunch was served buffet style onsite, which saved a great deal of
time. The mood was one of celebration and intellectual
excitement.
Quite a few significant developments were reported, including the
following:
- Bill Minter described a heated tool like a putty knife that
greatly speeds removal of pressure-sensitive tape.
- Per Laursen described his new system of continuous leaf-casting
with a "fourdrinier leafcaster" which automatically and continuously
calculates the amount of fiber needed and which produces, damp-dries
and presses four finished folio sheets a minute. He declined to
provide details of the mechanism because his patent has not yet been
granted.
- Nieves Valentin reported that documents fumigated with ethylene
oxide grew mold more readily than untreated documents.
- Bill Wilson summarized research on the effect of environmental
factors, and concluded on the basis of his literature review that
the strength of paper in use was acceptable from about 20% to about
75% RH; and that light and dust did not cause appreciable damage for
materials not on display.
- Bonnie Jo Cullison reported that the Newberry' s book storage
building was a qualified success: RH control was not as close as
they would like it, and vellum hardcover bindings warped if there
was more than a 10% difference between the RH of the storage area
and the reading room to which they were brought.
- Vincent Daniels summarized the state of our knowledge about
yellowing of paper.
- Don Sebera, in an informal question-and-answer period at an
evening panel on deacidification, described the sequence of three
fires during December and February at the prototype diethyl zinc
deacidification facility in Maryland. Everyone in the room seemed to
know about it already; there had been two published reports of it on
the bulletin board in the hail. The fires did not injure anyone, no
books were involved, and the facility was not destroyed as the
Wilson Library Bulletin reported in its May issue; but
the temporary building was destroyed, and the facility is
inoperable. It may take a year to redesign and reconstruct it. NASA
and Northrup have been working with the Library of Congress to set
up the facility, and it was NASA's decision to set the explosive
charge that resulted in the third and worst fire. (For details see
the LC Information Bulletin for March 17.)
- Margaret Hey, who is working in Italy with Fausta Gallo to find
out what foxing really is, found eight species of "precursor" fungi
in paper, which can grow at 32% RH. They produce water as a
metabolic byproduct, which encourages other fungi that require a
higher humidity.
In addition to significant developments, there were some
interesting facts, reports and publications:
- Document Reprocessors has a new videotape and a book on the
salvage of books and documents, reflecting their experience and
expertise.
- Simon Green said that gelatin sizing doubles the strength of
paper, but causes it to darken with age.
- Guy Petherbridge described the work he has done on descriptions
of early Greek manuscripts in book form, and said a book on it was
being published. He stressed the Importance of recording the
structure and condition of books not scheduled for conservation
treatment; of conserving "latent information, the as yet unrevealed
areas of meaning of the object, as well as of its perceived physical
manifestations."
- Tony Cains did not give the talk in the preprints, but described
the way books with deteriorating leather covers are dealt with at
Trinity College. They consolidate the leather with Klucel G; make
"book shoes" (slipcases without tops, designed to hold books in
separate pieces together on the shelf, inconspicuously); clean
leather and gilding with Klucel G and a toothbrush; stitch boards
back on (a practice still being evaluated); put a thin leather
hollow under the old spine sometimes; work new headbands and use
them to help attach old boards; and replace rotten cords.
Among the exhibitors were four freeze-dry services: Document
Reprocessors and three British firms. Total Information Ltd. (2A
Britannia Estate, Leagrave Road, Luton, Bedfordshire LU3 1RJ,
England) demonstrated the Archivist, the face-up copier earlier
known as the Selectec Duo-Copy; Derek Beck showed the redesigned
bookbinding tools he has for sale; and the National Preservation
Office of the British Library gave out information about their new
preservation services.
Shortly before the conference, there had been two floods at the
British Library, resulting from a defective pipe; one flood at the
Victoria and Albert Museum, and a bad fire at Hampton Court Palace.
None of these was formally discussed at the conference, but there
were one or two newspaper clippings on the bulletin board, and the
events came up in conversation. Except for the fact that the fire
was started accidentally by someone who used candles to light her
way around her living quarters, the disasters were very like
American disasters: the fire would never have gotten out of hand if
the Hampton Court building had been sprinklered; the major
institutions had put their disaster plans into effect, and the
neighboring cultural institutions lent skilled personnel to help
them through the crisis.
Don Sebera had a "poster" (the posters at this conference were
more like vertical display panels, one or more per display) that
attracted some excited comment. It presented the preservation value
of temperature and relative humidity in graphic form, allowing the
viewer to pick different combinations of both variables that would
be equivalent for paper and other hygroscopic materials. The graphs
had curved lines that ran through all points having the same
preservative effect-"isoperms," he called them. The temperature and
RH ranges permitted by the forthcoming ANSI environmental standards
were mapped as rectangles over the isoperms. Other applications of
this principle related to biological attack and cost effectiveness
of environmental control.
Almost all sessions were taped by the IPC, and negotiations to
provide for distribution of the tapes in this country and abroad are
underway. The IPC also intends to publish the proceedings. At
present, only the Conference Notes are available, but they include a
lot: 139 pages of abstracts (some quite long) and accompanying
bibliographies; descriptions of 10 posters; addresses of exhibitors
and advertisers; and lists of participants with addresses. They can
be purchased for £25 from the IPC, Leigh Lodge, Leigh,
Worcestershire WR6 5LB, England.