Morinehtar wrote:
How important is that older books with brown pages and spots (can't tell if due to mold or something else) are in a different bookcase than newer collectibles in Fine condition?
I guess I should buy something to measure the RH in the room. No other way to know, really.
Why are you more concerned about UV than mold?
Not important at all, IMHO (although I don't have many books with foxing, as I prefer to avoid them where possible).
Mold will not grow in low RH environments. No excess humidity = no mold, and is the biggest reason for not allowing high levels of moisture in the atmosphere around your books.
Finally bought a device that can measure relative humidity and temperature, and records daily highs and lows. Will report tomorrow.
Morinehtar wrote:
Finally bought a device that can measure relative humidity and temperature, and records daily highs and lows. Will report tomorrow.
Unless it expensive and calibrated expect it to be not terribly accurate. It might be, it just probably won't be. Both my dehumidifiers read about 5% different from each other (same brand and model).
Morinehtar wrote:
Results:
RH oscillates between 39-50%.
Temperature oscillates between 70-80F.
If accurate, those figures are fine. Ideally, maybe 45% or below at the top-end, but I wouldn't get stressed about that.
The temperature measurement is accurate, so I guess the RH measurement is not very far off. Additionally, I've replaced the CFL light bulbs for LED and installed 100% light-blocking curtains on that room. This will also prevent the room from getting too hot during the day. I think I'm good with regards to atmospheric conditions
The issue I have is that everything is piled up on my old wood-plastic composite laminate bookcase. This will change soon.
I was looking at the following bookcases:
Ash veneer: http://www.ikea.com/us/en/catalog/pro ... ery=591.553.30#/S59155330
Powder-coated steel: http://www.officedepot.com/a/products ... s-Series-Bookcases-345-x/
http://www.sears.com/sandusky-lee-san ... 2&blockNo=2&blockType=G2#
Powder coated steel is not as fashionable as wood and doesn't match anything in my house, but it probably requires less maintenance as there's no need to worry for placing the acid-free paper between the wood and the books?
The issue I have is that everything is piled up on my old wood-plastic composite laminate bookcase. This will change soon.
I was looking at the following bookcases:
Ash veneer: http://www.ikea.com/us/en/catalog/pro ... ery=591.553.30#/S59155330
Powder-coated steel: http://www.officedepot.com/a/products ... s-Series-Bookcases-345-x/
http://www.sears.com/sandusky-lee-san ... 2&blockNo=2&blockType=G2#
Powder coated steel is not as fashionable as wood and doesn't match anything in my house, but it probably requires less maintenance as there's no need to worry for placing the acid-free paper between the wood and the books?
Morinehtar wrote:
The temperature measurement is accurate, so I guess the RH measurement is not very far off. Additionally, I've replaced the CFL light bulbs for LED and installed 100% light-blocking curtains on that room. This will also prevent the room from getting too hot during the day. I think I'm good with regards to atmospheric conditions
The issue I have is that everything is piled up on my old wood-plastic composite laminate bookcase. This will change soon.
I was looking at the following bookcases:
Ash veneer: http://www.ikea.com/us/en/catalog/pro ... ery=591.553.30#/S59155330
Powder-coated steel: http://www.officedepot.com/a/products ... s-Series-Bookcases-345-x/
http://www.sears.com/sandusky-lee-san ... 2&blockNo=2&blockType=G2#
Powder coated steel is not as fashionable as wood and doesn't match anything in my house, but it probably requires less maintenance as there's no need to worry for placing the acid-free paper between the wood and the books?
I think the problem with RH sensors is just that they are intrinsically less reliable than temperature sensors. I don't think you can infer that one sensor is accurate on a device because the other is. I would personally trust an uncalibrated sensor to within 5-10%, based on my own observations. Truthfully, you are simply going to know if your environment is dry enough or too damp, anyway. If it feels nice and dry, it is. If the air feels moist, you have a problem. We aren't talking about preserving the dead sea scrolls here! :)
http://www.qualitydigest.com/inside/t ... ive-humidity-sensors.html
Interesting article about RH sensors. Mine is a simple COTS device so it is not calibrated, but I would think plus or minus 5% of the indicated value is still acceptable. The air feels ok, not moist but also not too dry. I think 40% RH sounds about right.
I bought the COTS device to have a reasonable estimate, but I have the AC running almost the whole day so the environment is stable and I don't think I will have a problem with humidity getting out of hand. I am actually more scared of silverfish during summertime; they damaged one of my favorite books a few years back, but I have since been able to keep them at bay by placing cinnamon sticks inside punctured plastic bags on the shelves.
I need to decide on a bookcase soon, I don't have shelf space for any more books.
I wanted to share this article about storage which I found very interesting: https://www.nedcc.org/free-resources/p ... review-of-current-options
Maybe you know all that stuff, but it might help someone browsing through here in the future. Who knew there were so many risks? Seems whatever you do, you still should line bookshelves with barrier materials and there's no risk-free method. Between the potential rust to steel and the acid vapors released by wood, its a scary world for books. I don't want my collection to look like my parent's where foxing, brown-paged books with dark stains (mold?) to top of text-block with severely shelf-worn DJs are the norm.
I bought the COTS device to have a reasonable estimate, but I have the AC running almost the whole day so the environment is stable and I don't think I will have a problem with humidity getting out of hand. I am actually more scared of silverfish during summertime; they damaged one of my favorite books a few years back, but I have since been able to keep them at bay by placing cinnamon sticks inside punctured plastic bags on the shelves.
I need to decide on a bookcase soon, I don't have shelf space for any more books.
I wanted to share this article about storage which I found very interesting: https://www.nedcc.org/free-resources/p ... review-of-current-options
Maybe you know all that stuff, but it might help someone browsing through here in the future. Who knew there were so many risks? Seems whatever you do, you still should line bookshelves with barrier materials and there's no risk-free method. Between the potential rust to steel and the acid vapors released by wood, its a scary world for books. I don't want my collection to look like my parent's where foxing, brown-paged books with dark stains (mold?) to top of text-block with severely shelf-worn DJs are the norm.
Stu, you're right, we aren't talking about the Dead Sea scrolls; this is something *much* more important
- wellinghall
- wellinghall
Well some Reddit user defined me as "quite a paranoid and fearful fellow" while discussing the topic
I really just want to build a safe setup that can be easily replicated so that I don't have to worry about it any more. But the more you read about conservation stuff, the more you learn there is no such thing.
I really just want to build a safe setup that can be easily replicated so that I don't have to worry about it any more. But the more you read about conservation stuff, the more you learn there is no such thing.