Conservation services Advice on preservation to the public, the business community and the public sector. A list of suppliers for general preservation and conservation materials. The Jersey Archive subscribes to Harwell Drying and Restoration Services and through our subscription all States departments can have access to Harwell priority users service in the case of a disaster. Occasional tours, talks, and demonstrations relating to conservation Occasionally arranging workshops relevant to States departments and private businesses, with specialist trainers, for example, Disaster Management. Under special circumstances, the Archive may undertake preservation and conservation projects for other institutions. General Information Unlike printed books, archives are unique documents and records. The information they contain may be the only evidence of events; and their physical format, order and materials also provide important evidence: for example, of the conditions and period they were written and used in. Therefore keeping the original archive materials in good condition is an important aspect of the work of Jersey Archive. Preservation Preservation aims to increase the longevity of archive materials through careful storage and use. It is important because there is not enough time or money to give each and every document individual treatment; and because poor storage can allow mould, insects, rodents, structural defects and chemical ageing to destroy archives. Their security against fire, flood, theft and vandalism also has to be ensured. Preservation is: Conservation Items can be given a full range of treatments, or minor repairs, balancing the priority of the item with the level of damage. High priority items
are: Items from these groups will be given priority for conservation treatment. Conservation ethics mean that all treatments should be reversible and not harm or conceal the original document. Unlike art conservation, the repairs should be visible so that there is no confusion about what comprises the original document. Archive conservators do not try to replace missing writing or drawings or make purely cosmetic repairs. Stains, punctures, old repairs, and abrasions, may all be part of the historical evidence a document conveys. Therefore, provided these "defects" do not put the document at risk, impede a vital treatment, or make it illegible, they are not removed or repaired. The aim is to stabilize the item and make it usable with the minimum of interference with the original.
Small amounts of chemicals such as solvents and enzymes are used for stain removal. The acid accelerated decay of paper affects great numbers of documents and at the present time alkali solutions are used to slow this. Conservation treatment Paper may be washed and given treatment with alkalis to slow down its rate of decay due to acidity. Obviously paper is very weak when wet and therefore I handle it carefully using support fabrics. I may also add solvents to dilute or resist the de-ionised water, and to accelerate drying. Tears and holes are repaired with hand made paper and tissues attached with wheat starch paste. They always have torn or pared edges to give a smooth transition between the repair and the original. Furthermore, repairs should be weaker than the original so that the repair rather than the original gives way if mechanically stressed. Sometimes paper pulp is used to fill in holes. Some inks, dyes and papers cannot tolerate aqueous treatments; there are solvent based alkali treatments to buffer them against acid degradation, and paper repairs can be attached with dry acrylic adhesives that are activated with heat from a small iron. Parchment and vellum is made from animal skin, treated with lime solution and tensioned, stretched and scraped while wet. It is usually strong and durable, and resists acidity because of its loading of lime; but may need repair if it has been attacked by insects, rodents, or mould. Some unusual materials
are used in parchment repair! Seals are repaired with beeswax. The wax is used warm, since it looses its adhesive qualities as it cools, but not warm enough to melt the original. Photograph repair is a complicated area to describe here as techniques vary with the emulsion, the printing out process, and the substrate (what the photograph is on - i.e. paper, tin, glass etc.). But the golden rule is chemical purity - photographs are highly sensitive to chemical degradation because the image is in an emulsion of chemicals chosen because they react very quickly to light. Subsequently they also tend to be sensitive to other chemicals as well, which come from pollution (backing materials, fingers, packaging, the environment, etc). Therefore the last thing a conservator wants to do in a conservation treatment is add in any more, so we use distilled water and highly refined solvents. There is a specially produced paper that is low in chemical residues, called "Silversafe", for repairs; and a box board which contains a layer of carbon filters that mop up pollutant gases, for packaging. Photographs have chilled, dry storage at the Archive. Bookbinding means learning about the construction of books from the way the pages are folded and gathered together, through sewing the gatherings and attaching the covers, to covering the covers with paper, cloth or leather, and gold tooling. However, in book conservation, the idea is to interfere as little as possible with the original and so I always try to retain as much of the old sewing structure and covering material as possible. This means strengthening sewing structures and board attachments with good quality materials, and lifting covering materials to unobtrusively insert new pieces. This is often more time consuming than rebinding a book from scratch; and it does mean that the book might look much the same as it did before repair rather than shiny and new. Bookbinding is the area of archive conservation that is most likely to get blurred with restoration. Modern materials such
as video tape and cine film, are copied onto standard formats on polyester
film, and the originals placed in chilled storage. This approach takes
account of the fact that changing technology means that the equipment
may not be available to play the original; and that some media, such as
video tape, are chemically unstable and very difficult to preserve. |
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