RE: [pestlist] Using Raw Wool in Exhibit Space

2009-11-29 Thread Kaplan, Emily
Hi,
 I would suggest freezing the raw wool as soon as it gets into the building in 
case it has an active infestation (bring it into the building in sealed plastic 
bags.)
Best,
Emily


Emily  Kaplan
Conservator
National Museum of the American Indian
Cultural Resources Center
4220 Silver Hill Rd
Suitland MD 20746
301.238.1418
fax 301.238.3201
kapl...@si.edu

From: pestlist-ow...@museumpests.net [mailto:pestlist-ow...@museumpests.net] On 
Behalf Of Megan Mcintosh
Sent: Friday, November 27, 2009 4:32 PM
To: pestl...@museumpests.com
Subject: [pestlist] Using Raw Wool in Exhibit Space

We are developing an exhibit about the woollen manufacturing industry at a 
small regional museum. We would like to include wool at various stages of 
development, starting with raw wool, to show to visitors how the machines 
process it. The curator is reluctant to use raw wool within the exhibit as 
someone told him a few years ago that it would attract pests, (though completed 
textile pieces are regularly displayed in the museum). Does anyone have advice 
on what could be done to treat raw wool so that it would not pose a threat to 
other artefacts in the space? If not, does anyone have ideas on how to 
realistically recreate wool?

Any input would be greatly appreciated.

Sincerely,

Megan McIntosh (Student)
Algonquin College, Applied Museum Studies


Re: [pestlist] Using Raw Wool in Exhibit Space

2009-11-29 Thread Alex Roach

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Hi Megan

The curator is right - the wool is very attractive to a range of insects 
including clothes moths and carpet beetles. The best approach is to 
ensure that all the wool to be used is frozen before it is installed. I 
would also re-freeze the wool every month or so as an added precaution 
(if it is going to be on display for an extended period).


Best wishes

Alex Roach

Megan Mcintosh wrote:


We are developing an exhibit about the woollen manufacturing industry 
at a small regional museum. We would like to include wool at various 
stages of development, starting with raw wool, to show to visitors how 
the machines process it. The curator is reluctant to use raw wool 
within the exhibit as someone told him a few years ago that it would 
attract pests, (though completed textile pieces are regularly 
displayed in the museum). Does anyone have advice on what could be 
done to treat raw wool so that it would not pose a threat to other 
artefacts in the space? If not, does anyone have ideas on how to 
realistically recreate wool?


 


Any input would be greatly appreciated.

 


Sincerely,

 


Megan McIntosh (Student)

Algonquin College, Applied Museum Studies



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Re: [pestlist] Using Raw Wool in Exhibit Space

2009-11-29 Thread bugman22

Megan -

Why not use a synthetic material which approximates wool?  I'm sure there are 
acrylics or some such thing out there you could use instead of real wool.  
After all, this is a demonstration of techniques and machinery.  Having 
inspected several textile museums, I can tell you small bits of wool will 
invariably adhere to the machinery and end up infested witrh webbing clothes 
moths and carpet beetles.

Tom Parker



-Original Message-
From: Kaplan, Emily kapl...@si.edu
To: 'pestlist@museumpests.net' pestlist@museumpests.net; 
pestl...@museumpests.com pestl...@museumpests.com
Sent: Sun, Nov 29, 2009 6:44 pm
Subject: RE: [pestlist] Using Raw Wool in Exhibit Space



Hi, 
 I would suggest freezing the raw wool as soon as it gets into the building in 
case it has an active infestation (bring it into the building in sealed plastic 
bags.) 
Best,
Emily 
 
 
Emily  Kaplan
Conservator
National Museum of the American Indian
Cultural Resources Center
4220 Silver Hill Rd
Suitland MD 20746
301.238.1418
fax 301.238.3201
kapl...@si.edu
 

From: pestlist-ow...@museumpests.net [mailto:pestlist-ow...@museumpests.net] On 
Behalf Of Megan Mcintosh
Sent: Friday, November 27, 2009 4:32 PM
To: pestl...@museumpests.com
Subject: [pestlist] Using Raw Wool in Exhibit Space

 
We are developing an exhibit about the woollen manufacturing industry at a 
small regional museum. We would like to include wool at various stages of 
development, starting with raw wool, to show to visitors how the machines 
process it. The curator is reluctant to use raw wool within the exhibit as 
someone told him a few years ago that it would attract pests, (though completed 
textile pieces are regularly displayed in the museum). Does anyone have advice 
on what could be done to treat raw wool so that it would not pose a threat to 
other artefacts in the space? If not, does anyone have ideas on how to 
realistically recreate wool?
 
Any input would be greatly appreciated. 
 
Sincerely, 
 
Megan McIntosh (Student)
Algonquin College, Applied Museum Studies