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June
21, 2005:
How To Preserve Your Stuff
Interview
with Don Williams, author of
Saving
Stuff
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Mike Carruthers:
Nothing lasts forever, that's particularly important to keep
in mind when you think about old home movies.
Don
Williams:
Really the best thing that can be done for them is to put them
into the deep freeze. Once you put photographic film into a
deep freeze there life span is really an uncounted number of
years.
Don Williams,
Senior Conservator of the Smithsonian Institution and author
of the book, Saving
Stuff says old video and audiotapes are doomed. They will
start to degrade after twenty years and you have to transfer
them to some digital medium before it's too late.
My own
specialty is furniture and wooden objects and one of the things
that really comes up is the whole notion of oiling and feeding
your furniture. Well, furniture is dead and wood is dead and
you don't need to oil it or feed it. So, just keep it clean
and maybe put a coat of paste wax on it every ten years but
the whole notion of actively maintaining it by slathering ointment,
those are just a catastrophe waiting to happen.
And old
clothing like a wedding dress or a military uniform you'd like
to preserve…
Make
sure you get it clean because the contamination from food and
use and body sweat and oils and things like that are a buffet
to a lot of insects. Make sure that you pack it with either
acid-free tissue paper or polyester batting so that there are
no creases. Because if you have creases in textiles that's a
real place for damage to begin. And then if you can keep it
in an archival acid-free box you're good to go for a long, long
time.
At somethingyoushouldknow.net
I'm Mike Carruthers and that's Something You Should Know.
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