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Repair Manual Home

Introduction

Guiding Principles

Setting up the Area


Toolbox

Parts of a book

Practical Guidelines

Identifying Repairable Materials

Glossary

Bibliography

Acknowledgements

Your Comments

Self-Closing Wrapper

Cleaning

Torn pages

Tip in a Page

Hinge Repair

Corner Repair

Sewing a Single Signature

Spine Repair

Air Dry Method

Hinge Tightening

FAQs

A Simple Book Repair Manual

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Wet Books--The Air Dry Method

This procedure is appropriate for handling one or two wet books. See the Dartmouth College Library Disaster Manual for handling of wet materials on a large scale. Ideally, wet books should be freeze dried then treated. This procedure outlines what to do when the book is not totally soaked and/or freezing is not practical. Wet books that dry closed, or are not treated within six hours of becoming wet, will almost always need to be discarded. The blocking agent used in processing paper acts as an adhesive when wet. The book will probably dry as a solid block.

Suggested Equipment & Supplies:

  • Book press
  • Press boards
  • Fan
  • Paper towels
  • Blotter paper
  • Iron
  • Procedures:

    1. Using blotter paper or paper towels, blot as much water from the book as possible. Be careful not to rub either the cover or the wet pages.

    2. Stand the book on its tail and fan open the pages. If possible dry the book in this position in the sunlight or with the use of a fan. Alternatively, dry the book away from a direct heat source, but in a warm dry area. The more quickly the book dries the less cockling (rippling) will occur.

    3. If after drying the cover is warped, place the book between two press boards and place in a book press for several days.

    4. In all likelihood a wet book that has been air dried will never look as good as it once did.

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