Hi Silvia,
I have frozen a number of textiles with sequins with no trouble. If the 
piece is contemporary ad in good condition I would feel comfortable 
freezing sequins. We are currently working with a collection that was wet 
from post-fire water damage. We are unsure whether the collection was 
merely frozen or vacuum freeze dried as part of the recovery process. Some 
of those sequins show delamination but more physical damage due to breakage 
of stitching.  This is however is less comparable to your current issue.   

The Indonesian textile is a tougher call. I know that we did see minor 
damage on pieces from South American were embellishments were attached 
using a native gum adhesive. I think thermal shock may have been too much 
for those low tack and older adhesives. 

Best,
Rachael Arenstein
A.M. Art Conservation, LLC
On Tuesday, September 21, 2021 at 7:51:49 AM UTC-4 Anderson, Gretchen wrote:

> I agree with Joel,  if they are not edible and are clean there is less 
> risk of pest damage.   Another question for the owner is “Are there pest 
> species where they are normally stored or displayed?” 
>
> The other major way to protect the textiles from pests is their display 
> method. How are the textiles displayed? In the open? In a frame or case? 
>  The tighter the display the safer the objects!
> Gretchen
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> On Sep 20, 2021, at 5:26 PM, Voron, Joel <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>  If they are not wool or munchable  and they don’t have human or pet hair 
> on them I would just have them vacuumed by a textile conservator and put 
> them on display. I’m assuming the hospital does not have other organic 
> textiles near where these will be displayed ….If that assumption is correct 
> there would be zero risk to infesting other collections. JTV 
>
>
>
>  
>
>  
>
> Joel Voron   Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
>
>   Conservation Dept.
>
>      Integrated Pest Management              
>
>       Office 757-220-7080
>
>         Cell 757-634-1175
>
>           E-Mail [email protected]
>
>  
>
>  
>
>
> On Sep 20, 2021, at 4:51 PM, smanriqu <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>  
>
> [CAUTION: This message originated from outside the Foundation. Do not 
> click links, open attachments or take action unless you know the contents 
> are safe] 
> Hello everyone, 
>
> I was asked to help prepare a group of textiles for freezing by a private 
> entity. Freezing will be done as a preventive measure for bugs since these 
> items are going to be displayed/stored at a hospital. There are two pieces 
> where I am hesitant about freezing.
>
> One is a thin and brittle cotton piece with gold leaf around the 
> decorative motifs. The textile is from Indonesia and it belongs to a 
> particular collector so there's no detailed information. I don't have much 
> info on the adhesive/sizing used for the gold leaf either, but it is thick 
> enough to be easily visible (see photos). I am a bit worried that freezing 
> might affect the unknown adhesive negatively but I am not sure.
>
> The other piece is embroidered with sequins. Both the textile and the 
> sequins seem in good condition. I have done research but I am still not 
> sure which way to go. I told the owners that I wouldn't recommend freezing 
> this piece since we don't know for certain how the plastic might react.
>
> FYI, I have already vacuumed both pieces and haven't found any signs of 
> pests so I am OK not freezing either piece and still feel that they pose no 
> risk to the hospital. I just would like to see if any of you have 
> experience on similar materials and what would be your advice.
>
> Thank you,
>
> Silvia Manrique 
> Collections Manager/Conservator
>
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