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Catégorie Conservation et restauration -- Méthodologie -- 21e siècle
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est un bulletin de Studies in conservation / Institut international de conservation des oeuvres historiques et artistiques![]()
Titre : Vol.70 N°5-6(2025; July-August) - 2025-07-01 Type de document : texte imprimé Année de publication : 2025 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Conservation et restauration -- Méthodologie -- 21e siècle Index. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Note de contenu : Contents :
Number 5 :
- Linking Teaching and Research in Conservation of the Built Environment: Case Studies from Courses of the University of Cyprus Graduate Programme on Conservation. Pages: 358-366
- Consolidating Lime Mortar with Nanolime: The Effect of the Ethanol:Water Ratio. Pages: 358-366
- Manufacturing Techniques of the Mortar Excavated from the Tieguai Tomb of the Northern Song Dynasty in Nanling, Southern China. Pages: 367-374
- Comparison of Color Changes in Paints Based on Ultramarine and Zinc White Resulting from Storage and Thermally Induced Aging. Pages: 375-385
- A Comparative Study of Bond Strength, Reversibility, and Projected Long-Term Durability of Lining Techniques for the Structural Stabilisation of Canvas Paintings. Pages: 386-403
- A Cultural Threat: Gastrallus pubens Fairmaire (Coleoptera, Ptinidae) and Biodeterioration of Rare Books in Italy. Pages: 404-416
- Magnets in Conservation of Easel Paintings: Mechanical Forces between Magnets and a Thin Paint Layer. Pages: 417-437
- Assessing Engineering Art Heritage: Historical Lifting Devices in Poland. Pages: 438-457
- Correction. Page: 458
Number 6 :
- Technical Study and Re-treatment of a Renaissance Statue of Mars Forming Part of the Decoration of the Bučovice Château in Southern Moravia. Pages: 459-476
- Are Nature-based Solutions for Built Heritage Conservation Resilient to Climate Change? The Response of Grass-based Soft Caps in Britain and Ireland to Future Climate Scenarios. Pages: 477-488
- Conservation of Waterlogged Wooden Structures from the Late Bronze Age at İnönü Cave (Türkiye). Pages: 489-500
- A Multi-Method Investigation of Ferruginous Concretions on Ceramics from Nan’ao No. I Shipwreck. Pages: 501-517
- Electrochemical Analysis of Chloride Impacts on Passivation of Archaeological Iron in Desalination Solutions. Pages: 518-529
- Phenotypic Trait of Painting Cracks. Pages: 530-545
- The Significance of the Citizens Theatre Paint Frames. Pages: 546-566
- Causes of Silver Mirroring and Yellowing on a Nineteenth-century Photographic Gelatin Glass Plate Negative. Pages: 567-575En ligne : https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/ysic20/70/5?nav=tocList [n° ou bulletin]Vol.70 N°5-6(2025; July-August) - 2025-07-01 [texte imprimé] . - 2025.
est un bulletin de Studies in conservation / Institut international de conservation des oeuvres historiques et artistiques![]()
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Conservation et restauration -- Méthodologie -- 21e siècle Index. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Note de contenu : Contents :
Number 5 :
- Linking Teaching and Research in Conservation of the Built Environment: Case Studies from Courses of the University of Cyprus Graduate Programme on Conservation. Pages: 358-366
- Consolidating Lime Mortar with Nanolime: The Effect of the Ethanol:Water Ratio. Pages: 358-366
- Manufacturing Techniques of the Mortar Excavated from the Tieguai Tomb of the Northern Song Dynasty in Nanling, Southern China. Pages: 367-374
- Comparison of Color Changes in Paints Based on Ultramarine and Zinc White Resulting from Storage and Thermally Induced Aging. Pages: 375-385
- A Comparative Study of Bond Strength, Reversibility, and Projected Long-Term Durability of Lining Techniques for the Structural Stabilisation of Canvas Paintings. Pages: 386-403
- A Cultural Threat: Gastrallus pubens Fairmaire (Coleoptera, Ptinidae) and Biodeterioration of Rare Books in Italy. Pages: 404-416
- Magnets in Conservation of Easel Paintings: Mechanical Forces between Magnets and a Thin Paint Layer. Pages: 417-437
- Assessing Engineering Art Heritage: Historical Lifting Devices in Poland. Pages: 438-457
- Correction. Page: 458
Number 6 :
- Technical Study and Re-treatment of a Renaissance Statue of Mars Forming Part of the Decoration of the Bučovice Château in Southern Moravia. Pages: 459-476
- Are Nature-based Solutions for Built Heritage Conservation Resilient to Climate Change? The Response of Grass-based Soft Caps in Britain and Ireland to Future Climate Scenarios. Pages: 477-488
- Conservation of Waterlogged Wooden Structures from the Late Bronze Age at İnönü Cave (Türkiye). Pages: 489-500
- A Multi-Method Investigation of Ferruginous Concretions on Ceramics from Nan’ao No. I Shipwreck. Pages: 501-517
- Electrochemical Analysis of Chloride Impacts on Passivation of Archaeological Iron in Desalination Solutions. Pages: 518-529
- Phenotypic Trait of Painting Cracks. Pages: 530-545
- The Significance of the Citizens Theatre Paint Frames. Pages: 546-566
- Causes of Silver Mirroring and Yellowing on a Nineteenth-century Photographic Gelatin Glass Plate Negative. Pages: 567-575En ligne : https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/ysic20/70/5?nav=tocList Contient
- Linking Teaching and Research in Conservation of the Built Environment: Case Studies from Courses of the University of Cyprus Graduate Programme on Conservation / Maria Philokyprou in Studies in conservation, Vol.70 N°5-6(2025; July-August) (2025-07-01)
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- Consolidating Lime Mortar with Nanolime : The Effect of the Ethanol:Water Ratio / Eva Busschots in Studies in conservation, Vol.70 N°5-6(2025; July-August) (2025-07-01)
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- Manufacturing Techniques of the Mortar Excavated from the Tieguai Tomb of the Northern Song Dynasty in Nanling, Southern China / Yingxue Gong in Studies in conservation, Vol.70 N°5-6(2025; July-August) (2025-07-01)
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- Comparison of Color Changes in Paints Based on Ultramarine and Zinc White Resulting from Storage and Thermally Induced Aging / Irina A. Balakhnina in Studies in conservation, Vol.70 N°5-6(2025; July-August) (2025-07-01)
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- A Comparative Study of Bond Strength, Reversibility, and Projected Long-Term Durability of Lining Techniques for the Structural Stabilisation of Canvas Paintings / Nikita Shah in Studies in conservation, Vol.70 N°5-6(2025; July-August) (2025-07-01)
- A Cultural Threat : Gastrallus pubens Fairmaire (Coleoptera, Ptinidae) and Biodeterioration of Rare Books in Italy / Enzo Peri in Studies in conservation, Vol.70 N°5-6(2025; July-August) (2025-07-01)
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- Magnets in Conservation of Easel Paintings : Mechanical Forces between Magnets and a Thin Paint Layer / Zuzanna Szozda in Studies in conservation, Vol.70 N°5-6(2025; July-August) (2025-07-01)
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- Assessing Engineering Art Heritage: Historical Lifting Devices in Poland / Katarzyna Pietrzak-Król in Studies in conservation, Vol.70 N°5-6(2025; July-August) (2025-07-01)
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- Technical Study and Re-treatment of a Renaissance Statue of Mars Forming Part of the Decoration of the Bučovice Château in Southern Moravia / Peter Majoroš in Studies in conservation, Vol.70 N°5-6(2025; July-August) (2025-07-01)
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- Are Nature-based Solutions for Built Heritage Conservation Resilient to Climate Change? The Response of Grass-based Soft Caps in Britain and Ireland to Future Climate Scenarios / Jenny Richards in Studies in conservation, Vol.70 N°5-6(2025; July-August) (2025-07-01)
- Conservation of Waterlogged Wooden Structures from the Late Bronze Age at İnönü Cave (Türkiye) / Hamza Ekmen in Studies in conservation, Vol.70 N°5-6(2025; July-August) (2025-07-01)
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- A Multi-Method Investigation of Ferruginous Concretions on Ceramics from Nan’ao No. I Shipwreck in Studies in conservation, Vol.70 N°5-6(2025; July-August) (2025-07-01)
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- Electrochemical Analysis of Chloride Impacts on Passivation of Archaeological Iron in Desalination Solutions in Studies in conservation, Vol.70 N°5-6(2025; July-August) (2025-07-01)
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- Phenotypic Trait of Painting Cracks in Studies in conservation, Vol.70 N°5-6(2025; July-August) (2025-07-01)
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- The Significance of the Citizens Theatre Paint Frames in Studies in conservation, Vol.70 N°5-6(2025; July-August) (2025-07-01)
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- Causes of Silver Mirroring and Yellowing on a Nineteenth-century Photographic Gelatin Glass Plate Negative in Studies in conservation, Vol.70 N°5-6(2025; July-August) (2025-07-01)
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Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité SL 28442 Studies in Conservation Fascicule ESA Saint-Luc Beaux-Arts - Biblio Disponible La grotte de Lascaux : du constat d'état à la création d'une base de consultation / Patrick Jallet in Conservation restauration des biens culturels (CRBC), no.24(2006) (2006-12-01)
Handling ‘Poison Books’: Dry Versus Wet Scenarios in Studies in conservation, Vol.70 N°7-8(2025; October-November) (2025-10-01)
[article]
Titre : Handling ‘Poison Books’: Dry Versus Wet Scenarios Type de document : texte imprimé Année de publication : 2025 Article en page(s) : P. 694-701 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Arsenic -- Toxicologie -- Effets des inondations
Conservation et restauration -- Méthodologie -- 21e siècle
Métaux lourds -- Toxicologie
Pigments -- Analyse
Pigments -- Toxicologie
Reliure -- Matériaux -- Toxicologie -- 19e siècle -- Études de casIndex. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Résumé : Toxic heavy metal pigments are known to be found in nineteenth-century, mass-produced, Euro-American bookbindings. A lack of data, standards, and regulations for exposure to heavy metal pigments in the cultural heritage sector limits understanding of when such bookbindings might present the greatest health and safety risk and how best to assess such risk. This case study measures the friability of arsenic, chromium, and lead based pigments in a sampling of nineteenth-century bookbindings through three scenarios: first, in their naturally aged, intact state; second, during a water event simulation; and third, after salvage and air-drying from the water disaster simulation. The data demonstrate that the risk of exposure to these heavy metals increases during and after a water event, with exposure to arsenic presenting the highest degree of risk.
in Studies in conservation > Vol.70 N°7-8(2025; October-November) (2025-10-01) . - P. 694-701[article] Handling ‘Poison Books’: Dry Versus Wet Scenarios [texte imprimé] . - 2025 . - P. 694-701.
Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Studies in conservation > Vol.70 N°7-8(2025; October-November) (2025-10-01) . - P. 694-701
Catégories : Arsenic -- Toxicologie -- Effets des inondations
Conservation et restauration -- Méthodologie -- 21e siècle
Métaux lourds -- Toxicologie
Pigments -- Analyse
Pigments -- Toxicologie
Reliure -- Matériaux -- Toxicologie -- 19e siècle -- Études de casIndex. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Résumé : Toxic heavy metal pigments are known to be found in nineteenth-century, mass-produced, Euro-American bookbindings. A lack of data, standards, and regulations for exposure to heavy metal pigments in the cultural heritage sector limits understanding of when such bookbindings might present the greatest health and safety risk and how best to assess such risk. This case study measures the friability of arsenic, chromium, and lead based pigments in a sampling of nineteenth-century bookbindings through three scenarios: first, in their naturally aged, intact state; second, during a water event simulation; and third, after salvage and air-drying from the water disaster simulation. The data demonstrate that the risk of exposure to these heavy metals increases during and after a water event, with exposure to arsenic presenting the highest degree of risk. Multi-Analytical Investigation of Arsenical Transfer and Remediation on Nineteenth-Century Green Books in Studies in conservation, Vol.70 N°7-8(2025; October-November) (2025-10-01)
[article]
Titre : Multi-Analytical Investigation of Arsenical Transfer and Remediation on Nineteenth-Century Green Books Type de document : texte imprimé Année de publication : 2025 Article en page(s) : P. 714-729 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Arsenic -- Contamination -- Recherche
Arsenic -- Toxicologie
Conservation et restauration -- Méthodologie -- 21e siècle
Documentation de bibliothèque -- Conservation et restauration -- Toxicologie
Fourier, Spectroscopie infrarouge à transformée de
Livres -- États-Unis -- 19e siècle -- Conservation et restauration
Microscopie électronique à balayage
Northwestern university. Library -- Fonds spéciaux -- Livres rares -- Conservation et restauration
Rayonnement synchrotron
Spectroscopie des rayons X
Spectroscopie Raman
Vert de ParisIndex. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Résumé : Books containing heavy metals, specifically nineteenth-century green arsenical books, have been identified at Northwestern University Libraries, raising health and safety concerns related to handling. Copper acetoarsenite pigments, such as emerald green, were detected on book covers, decorative page edges, labels, and other components using noninvasive analytical techniques including X-ray fluorescence (XRF), Raman spectroscopy, and Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy. Further examination of selected volumes using synchrotron radiation (SR) techniques revealed pigment migration, degradation, and arsenic transfer to adjacent books. This paper expands on initial findings through two related experiments. The first explored the transfer of arsenic using mechanical friction; Staedtler Mars® white vinyl erasers rubbed on arsenical books generated crumbs which were analyzed via scanning electron microscopy–energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (SEM-EDX). Results confirmed the transfer of arsenic, copper, and lead, with decorative page edges being particularly prone to shedding arsenic onto other materials. The second experiment tested remediation methods on a book contaminated by prolonged exposure to an arsenical neighbor. Surface cleaning using erasers and a vacuum removed flecks of pigment but did not eliminate non-chromophoric arsenic as confirmed by SR analyses, which highlights its presence either as a degradation product embedded within the paper or present in the paper as part of its production process. Findings demonstrate the acute toxicity risk posed by arsenical books and support the need for safe handling protocols. However, materials with only trace levels of arsenic embedded during production may pose a lower risk of transfer. Cross contamination beyond prolonged direct contact appears limited. These results highlight critical considerations for library preservation practices and future research on arsenic in historical materials.
in Studies in conservation > Vol.70 N°7-8(2025; October-November) (2025-10-01) . - P. 714-729[article] Multi-Analytical Investigation of Arsenical Transfer and Remediation on Nineteenth-Century Green Books [texte imprimé] . - 2025 . - P. 714-729.
Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Studies in conservation > Vol.70 N°7-8(2025; October-November) (2025-10-01) . - P. 714-729
Catégories : Arsenic -- Contamination -- Recherche
Arsenic -- Toxicologie
Conservation et restauration -- Méthodologie -- 21e siècle
Documentation de bibliothèque -- Conservation et restauration -- Toxicologie
Fourier, Spectroscopie infrarouge à transformée de
Livres -- États-Unis -- 19e siècle -- Conservation et restauration
Microscopie électronique à balayage
Northwestern university. Library -- Fonds spéciaux -- Livres rares -- Conservation et restauration
Rayonnement synchrotron
Spectroscopie des rayons X
Spectroscopie Raman
Vert de ParisIndex. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Résumé : Books containing heavy metals, specifically nineteenth-century green arsenical books, have been identified at Northwestern University Libraries, raising health and safety concerns related to handling. Copper acetoarsenite pigments, such as emerald green, were detected on book covers, decorative page edges, labels, and other components using noninvasive analytical techniques including X-ray fluorescence (XRF), Raman spectroscopy, and Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy. Further examination of selected volumes using synchrotron radiation (SR) techniques revealed pigment migration, degradation, and arsenic transfer to adjacent books. This paper expands on initial findings through two related experiments. The first explored the transfer of arsenic using mechanical friction; Staedtler Mars® white vinyl erasers rubbed on arsenical books generated crumbs which were analyzed via scanning electron microscopy–energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (SEM-EDX). Results confirmed the transfer of arsenic, copper, and lead, with decorative page edges being particularly prone to shedding arsenic onto other materials. The second experiment tested remediation methods on a book contaminated by prolonged exposure to an arsenical neighbor. Surface cleaning using erasers and a vacuum removed flecks of pigment but did not eliminate non-chromophoric arsenic as confirmed by SR analyses, which highlights its presence either as a degradation product embedded within the paper or present in the paper as part of its production process. Findings demonstrate the acute toxicity risk posed by arsenical books and support the need for safe handling protocols. However, materials with only trace levels of arsenic embedded during production may pose a lower risk of transfer. Cross contamination beyond prolonged direct contact appears limited. These results highlight critical considerations for library preservation practices and future research on arsenic in historical materials. Occupational Exposure Risk Assessment of Library Collections Work Tasks and Storage Areas in Studies in conservation, Vol.70 N°7-8(2025; October-November) (2025-10-01)
[article]
Titre : Occupational Exposure Risk Assessment of Library Collections Work Tasks and Storage Areas Type de document : texte imprimé Année de publication : 2025 Article en page(s) : P. 730-739 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Arsenic -- Contamination -- Identification
Conservation et restauration -- Méthodologie -- 21e siècle
Métaux lourds -- Toxicologie -- Dépistage
Métaux lourds -- Toxicologie -- Étude de cas
Santé au travail -- Bibliothèques -- 21e siècle
Spectroscopie de fluorescence
Spectroscopie des rayons XIndex. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Résumé : Cultural heritage sites, including libraries where historical texts are available, are responsible to staff, research visitors, and the public for providing a safe and healthy work and educational experience. Identifying hazards inherent and acquired on collections, or in contaminated work areas and storage environments, has become more prevalent with the use of XRF analysis (for metals), knowledge of collector's notes, and records of conservation methods. However, this is only source identification data, that typically does not directly correlate to the potential health risk from specific work tasks and where routes of exposure exist. An occupational exposure assessment, conducted by a qualified health and safety professional, will determine actual risks during work tasks via personal sampling devices and media, surface and dermal wipes, and other methods. An exposure assessment case study is presented, related to the testing and assessment of worker exposure to and workspace contamination from selected metals (arsenic, chromium, lead, and mercury) within historical collections at a regional library. Personal sampling results quantified potential inhalation exposures, wipe samples verified the presence of contaminants on hands (potential ingestion risk), and surface wipe results identified cross-contamination in collection storage and work areas. Detailed recommendations for improved safe work practices, personal protection, and other controls were offered. Understanding hazard sources, routes of exposure, and surface transference defines both the potential health risk and the methods to best control that exposure. Safety and collection preservation and conservation are not disjointed topics. Safety can work hand in hand to support the protection of collections.
in Studies in conservation > Vol.70 N°7-8(2025; October-November) (2025-10-01) . - P. 730-739[article] Occupational Exposure Risk Assessment of Library Collections Work Tasks and Storage Areas [texte imprimé] . - 2025 . - P. 730-739.
Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Studies in conservation > Vol.70 N°7-8(2025; October-November) (2025-10-01) . - P. 730-739
Catégories : Arsenic -- Contamination -- Identification
Conservation et restauration -- Méthodologie -- 21e siècle
Métaux lourds -- Toxicologie -- Dépistage
Métaux lourds -- Toxicologie -- Étude de cas
Santé au travail -- Bibliothèques -- 21e siècle
Spectroscopie de fluorescence
Spectroscopie des rayons XIndex. décimale : 7.025 Dommages. Conservation. Protection Résumé : Cultural heritage sites, including libraries where historical texts are available, are responsible to staff, research visitors, and the public for providing a safe and healthy work and educational experience. Identifying hazards inherent and acquired on collections, or in contaminated work areas and storage environments, has become more prevalent with the use of XRF analysis (for metals), knowledge of collector's notes, and records of conservation methods. However, this is only source identification data, that typically does not directly correlate to the potential health risk from specific work tasks and where routes of exposure exist. An occupational exposure assessment, conducted by a qualified health and safety professional, will determine actual risks during work tasks via personal sampling devices and media, surface and dermal wipes, and other methods. An exposure assessment case study is presented, related to the testing and assessment of worker exposure to and workspace contamination from selected metals (arsenic, chromium, lead, and mercury) within historical collections at a regional library. Personal sampling results quantified potential inhalation exposures, wipe samples verified the presence of contaminants on hands (potential ingestion risk), and surface wipe results identified cross-contamination in collection storage and work areas. Detailed recommendations for improved safe work practices, personal protection, and other controls were offered. Understanding hazard sources, routes of exposure, and surface transference defines both the potential health risk and the methods to best control that exposure. Safety and collection preservation and conservation are not disjointed topics. Safety can work hand in hand to support the protection of collections. PermalinkShowing our Metal: Identifying and Managing Hazardous Substances in Book Covers in the Museums Victoria Library in Studies in conservation, Vol.70 N°7-8(2025; October-November) (2025-10-01)
PermalinkToxic Tales: Arsenic’s Legacy in Nineteenth-century Green Book Bindings at Northwestern University Libraries in Studies in conservation, Vol.70 N°7-8(2025; October-November) (2025-10-01)
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