ECS Conservation
Our rare book conservators at ECS are highly skilled and professionally trained. They are capable of performing a wide range of treatments on bound materials including medieval manuscripts on vellum, period decorative volumes, contemporary design bindings, period Bibles, historic scrapbooks, photographic albums and pamphlets. Conservation may include re-housing in custom-designed enclosures, basic stabilization or complex conservation treatment and rebinding.
Treatment options are based on a complete examination of the artifact, its intended use and how it will be stored. Whenever possible, a book's original materials are integrated into the treatment. For example, original boards may be reused, fragments of the original spine may be mounted onto a repaired and reinforced spine structure, or original endpapers with inscriptions and bookplates may be retained and re-applied to the repaired book structure. Books with covers too severely deteriorated for reuse are rebound in a style sympathetic to the original binding or to the period of the printed text.
Equally important to preserving the appearance of a book is the sewing and binding structure that must be sound and flexible. Our goal is to repair books so they open easily with minimal strain on the sewing, spine and board attachments. Durable, high-quality materials are used exclusively in the conservation and restoration process such as fine European leathers, durable book cloths, linen threads and cord, alkaline buffered machine-made papers, hand-made western papers and Japanese papers just to mention a few.
In accordance with international conservation standards and the Code of Ethics and Guidelines for Practice of the American Institute for Conservation (AIC), materials and techniques used are reversible. Treatments are documented with written and photographic records. Photo-documentation is provided to the client upon request.
Gallery
Treatment Options for Paper artifacts may include:
- mold removal
- surface cleaning
- flattening
- aqueous treatments to reduce acidity
- alkalization/deacidification
- stain reduction
- tape and adhesive removal
- separation from poor quality mounts
- consolidation of cracked or flaking media
- inpainting areas of loss within the media
- mending tears or breaks
- infilling losses in the support
- lining
- rehousing options
- four-flap enclosures
- polyester sleeves
- encapsulation
- conservation matting and framing