Preservation Unit
44 Library, MC-522
UIUC Library
1408 West Gregory Drive
Urbana, IL 61801
217-244-1626
Conservation Lab
Oak Street Library Facility
2nd Floor
809 South Oak Street
Mail Code 527
Champaign, IL 61820
217-265-4198
PresConsNews
- RBML Mold Recovery Project Done
- May 15, 2009
- RBML Mold Recovery
- Feb 8, 2008
Preservation Processing Policy for Gifts and Newly Acquired Older Materials
Introduction
In order to ensure that the materials placed within our collections are both
functional and structurally sound, the Library’s Preservation and Conservation Program will provide
some services for gift collections and newly acquired materials that require treatment. This policy
governs those services and the treatments offered.
Physical Considerations for Evaluating Gift Materials
The selection principles that subject librarians consider when acquiring new
materials are valid for gifts and the acquisition of older materials as well. However, a number of
physical criteria not generally considered when acquiring newly printed materials should be taken
into account. These include:
- Heavy marking or annotation.
- Excessive wear or damage.
- Brittle paper – items unable to withstand typical use, unable to be cataloged
without difficulty, or structurally unsound.
- Books printed on dittos, veri-fax, copy-flo, or other unstable reprographic
processes – the inks fade quickly and require replacement or reformatting
- Evidence of mold, insect, or other infestation or damage.
Services Offered
When subject librarians process gift materials requiring treatment through the
Library’s Acquisitions Unit, they will be instructed to complete an
orange treatment streamer for those requiring repair and a
white streamer for unbound materials.
Minor Damage and Repair
The Library’s Preservation and Conservation Program will offer the following
services for gifts and newly acquired materials requiring treatment.
- Pamphlet Binding
- Any unbound item measuring less than ¼” in thickness and
not brittle.
- Minor Book Repair
- Cutting uncut pages.
- Hinge tightening.
- Repairing torn pages (up to ten per item).
- Tip-ins for loose pages (up to five per item).
- Rehanging sound text blocks – placing sound text block back into a
structurally sound case.
- Commercial Binding – Items must have 3/8” inner margin and
not brittle.
- Paperback volumes earmarked for reference or reserve collections only (all
others
only after third circulation).
- Hardbound volumes requiring rebinding or re-casing (as determined by
Conservation personnel).
- Unbound items such as theses and white-papers identified as necessary for the
Library’s collections.
- Brittle materials will receive only minimal stabilization until demonstrated
need indicates a need to reformat the item.
Excessive Damage
In some cases, materials entering the Library are so damaged that they are
impossible to treat in a reasonably cost-effective manner. The following is a list of damage that
is not cost-effective to treat on demand and are outside the scope of services provided:
§
Items otherwise meeting criteria for commercial binding but with insufficient inner margin
(minimum of 3/8” inner margin). Subject librarians will be asked to identify funds to acquire a new
edition or to have the item reformatted.
§
Excessive Repairs such as those listed below. Subject librarians will be asked to identify funds
to acquire a new edition or secure necessary funds to have the item(s) conserved.
-
- Text block is not sound and the item does not otherwise meet criteria for
commercial binding, i.e., brittle paper, insufficient margins, etc….
- Excessive use of inappropriate tapes in repair to the volume’s spine, pages,
or other components.
- Repair work that otherwise exceeds minor repairs listed above.
- Remediation of active mold and pest infestations.
- Conservation treatment.
§
Brittle Books and Serials Requiring Immediate Reformatting
-
- Generally, brittle and damaged gift volumes should not be added to the Libraries’
collections. The cost of providing access to brittle and damaged library materials is high, so high
that we can scarcely address the needs of collections in current use. However, there may be cases
where a gift item's intellectual content or archival value outweighs its poor physical condition.
In these cases, the accepting bibliographer must make a monetary commitment to make the gift items
serviceable. For example, when published volumes are in question, the bibliographer should attempt
to identify funds to purchase a copy of the title that is in good condition or, if an acceptable
copy is not available, to have the item reformatted.
- In cases of gifted archival collections or rare books, exceptions will be made, but subject
librarians should consider asking the donor for processing funds or commit part of their collection
funding to ensure the item’s accessibility.
Should items be desired that contain any of these problems, the Head of
Preservation will advise the collection manager how to secure services to address these issues.
However, the costs for these treatments will be considered a part of the acquisition and the
responsibility of the collection manager.