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-----------------------------------------------------------Thanks Tom!
Monika

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of [email protected]
Sent: 07 April 2009 23:22
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [pestlist] freezing Japanese laquer

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Hi Monika,

At the 1995 Biodeterioration of Cultural Property 3 meetings in Bangkok
(Proceedings pages 555 to 566), Hiromi Tanimura and Seiji Yamaguchi gave a
poster which summarized their work on low temperature treatment of Japanese
lacquer. They did their treatments on 14 damaged urushi objects so they
could measure changes to cracked pieces, or look for problems on ones with
borer holes. They treated bowls, dishes, trays and an inlaid box up to 30 x
30 x 12 cm in dimension, so the pieces were representative of a good range
of internal constructions and surface detailing. However they stated there
is a wider range of urushi work yet to consider. Ages of the pieces were
150 to 50 years old so they had significant number of natural cycles to
react to before treatment.

Freezing was to -30C and two cycles were done. No changes were measured by
micrometer and visual inspection of the pieces pre- and post-treatment.

In general I would expect urushi to behave as other good quality coatings,
it has microscopic pores whose significance depends on the processing of
the liquid and number of coats. Such good barriers (but not perfect) will
resist moisture movement over the short duration of the treatment. The most
significant threat would be dimensional change from moisture movement, and
that is further controlled by the recommended bagging step. The authors
also took the step to wrap each piece in a single layer of paper which
added a significant moisture buffer.

In comparison, the experience from archeological wet site material as
described before is expected. Significant and prolonged exposure to
moisture leading to saturation allows dissolution of components, swelling
and significant mechanical levering, and probable microbial action at some
point, all combining to allow delamination to proceed when the
freeze-drying was carried out. Quite a different scenario to the dry and
nominally intact samples used by Tanimura and Yamaguchi.

Currently in Japan, urushi objects are likely to be treated by CAF
(controlled atmosphere fumigation) methods, either low oxygen or CO2.

Sincerely,
Tom Strang

Canadian Conservation Institute | Institut canadien de conservation
Senior Conservation Scientist | Scientifique principal en conservation
Institut Canadien de Conservation | Canadian Conservation Institute
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, K1A 0M5

[email protected]
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