Monday, May 30, 2011

FILLS, LOSSES, SATISFACTION

So, whenever I get back home from my internship, my mom or dad (who, yes, I still live with because sacrifices people!, and my parents are supportive, etc, etc.) ask me "what did you do at 'work' today?" (I am always unsure, does a paid internship count as work? Or more like some sort of fantastic education thing? Anyways, in my family, its work, but I am hesitant to call it that, especially because work is generally not as supportive and educational, while my internship is pretty cool on all accounts). 


Moral of the story is, I often simply respond with, "worked on the Law Scrapbooks," and don't explain what that means. So here is a basic introduction to my set up when working with the scrapbooks....


What I actually do with them? A lot of things. I've been very lucky that Northwestern identified the scrapbooks as a teaching tool for my development as an aspiring conservator. In the process of treating the scrapbooks, I've been able to pretty much dabble in a variety of approaches. Most of the time, however, I have been poulticing with methyl cellulose (A4M at either 5 percent or 2.5 percent) or filling losses and mending with Japanese tissue.

At work this week, I was alone for a few minutes so I snapped a couple of cell phone pictures (pardon the graininess), of an average fill I will do on any given day. This one is honestly not a great fill, but it is representative of the process of doing a fill with Japanese tissue and the greatest, time-tested water soluble adhesive, wheat starch paste.

So I begin with loss. How sad a little triangle of paper is GONE! Luckily, it is not where there is text and its simply visually unpleasant. Also, because of its location, if handled, the loss could potentially catch and tear the paper, so this must be fixed....





I recently learned how to tone paper, and made two different tones, a deep orange brown for the yellowing papers and a cooler bluish brown for papers that seem to have that hue. Both tissues were toned with acrylics and deionized water. I used a very lightweight tengujo paper that I often layer over heavier duty tissues when filling losses in thicker paper. In order to tone the fill but not make it too bright, I actually filled the loss first with an uncolored thicker tissue and then placed the toned tengujo behind, to layer the colors. Here is what it looks like from the back, you can see the color saturation where the tengujo is overlapping with the original paper and getting very dark.



I adhered the tissues using wheat starch paste. Instead of simply brushing the paste directly onto the tengujo I actually pasted up a piece of mylar and laid the tengujo onto it to  minimize the amount of paste used in the repair. I really like this method when working with thinner tissues because it seems to making handing easier and reduce the amount of foreign substrate you are adding to your object. Its something I just learned, moral of the story: BIG FAN.


I sliced off the excess tissue after the paper had properly dried and voila! FIXED. Obviously you can still see a color difference, and that's okay, I'm not pretending the repair never happened, however, the toning allows for the colors to blend a little bit better than a bright white tissue. 




Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Refresh.

I have decided to start blogging again. Maybe its the summer air finally settling in, maybe its the fact I have better things to do and kindly oblige myself to any distraction that presents itself, maybe its because I am growing increasingly nervous about conservation and future-stuffs, maybe its because after my trip to NYC I am more inspired about conservation (which would take me from VERY inspired to EXTREMELY inspired, which translates into blogging I guess?), maybe its well--honestly, let's stop psychoanalyzing and start blogging...

Anyways, I guess today I will talk about my current situation, and  hopefully, keep updates as I learn new stuff and have good pictures.

Soooo....
I am currently in a pretty good position (not perfect, it never is, but at the same time I am feeling okay). After graduating I interned briefly at the Chicago History Museum but when a full-time position presented itself, I took it (even though it had absolutely nothing to do with my dreams of conservation), I kept applying to conservation things and kept being rejected, and after nine months, I finally was offered a 50 percent time internship at Northwestern's library conservation lab. I was PUMPED. I still AM PUMPED. They are great. I really mean this from the bottom of my heart. SO GREAT. I am not an optimist, at all, so when I say they are great, I MEAN it. haha.

Since I started in March, I have been working with the two conservators, two technicians and one conservation fellow, along with sitting in on preservation meetings with the whole preservation staff. It's been great. As a Chicagoan, I have always felt a certain hesitation when it came to Northwestern (I guess the reputation preceded them), but all of those preconceptions have been eviscerated. The people who work at Northwestern ( I don't interact with the student body very much, so I can't say very much about them) are incredibly nice and smart people. Also incredibly supportive and patient with me! As an intern, I have been taught SO much!

Anyways--what do I do at Northwestern? Well, at this point I have been working on a few various projects, specifically a survey of the Falke Collection, Arabic manuscripts from Northern Africa, and a very time intensive treatment of the Northwestern Law Scrapbooks (made in about 1930). I will leave specific details for later posts, because at this point, this one is already too long, and I have reading to do!

I guess for now I'll just talk about my personal experiences with conservation in general, and that is that it is hard to get started. I remember in my second year of college, I got interested in conservation, and I did not find a lab who would let me do things until my senior year. Conservation is a really welcoming field, conservators love their job (which makes sense, because it's pretty much the coolest), but at the same time, many people hesitate to let a random person touch priceless artifacts.  I totally understand why this is, but at the same time, its been a learning curve, and with more experience comes more opportunities.

Alright, I'm done posting for now but hopefully I'll update soon with some actual NEWS or STORIES....