General Collections conservation is a necessary and key activity
of an effective preservation program. This manual has been written
to provide background on standard commercial book production, give
guidelines for selecting appropriate candidates for in-house book
repair, and introduce staff to the elements of book repair. Included
is a bibliography of sources used in preparing this manual,
a link to the Roberts & Etherington "Bookbinding and the Conservation
of Books: A Dictionary of Descriptive Terminology",a list of necessary
book repair tools, and instructions for ten simple repairs.
In-house book repair is appropriate for general collections materials
not needing complete rebinding by a commercial binder. The advantages
of repairing materials in-house are that high use materials can be
returned to the stacks more quickly and simple repairs may often be
done more economically. These advantages must be weighed against the
cost in staff time and training associated with book repair staff
attaining an acceptable level of expertise. Additionally, simple book
repair treatment, while a single activity, is based upon a series
of preservation decisions. A number of pre-repair questions should
be asked before a book reaches the repair stage. Bibliographers should
play a role in most repair decisions. For that reason, the emphasis
of this manual will be on simple book repair; that is, those repairs
that are most easily completed in-house on non-brittle books, by staff
with a good understanding of book repair, and often do not require
that a bibliographer make a repair, replacement, or reformat decision
on the item.
Circulating collections are victims of a number of stresses. Among
them are the quality and nature of the materials used in producing
the book, the library environment, and their relatively high use and
treatment by patrons. Each factor presents its own set of stresses
on a book. Each factor is important in assessing risk to the collection
and anticipating the quantity of repairs that will be handled on a
yearly average. It is expected that approximately 2,000 to 4,000 books
will need repair from the Dartmouth College Libraries General
Collections each year. A percentage of these will fall under the definition
of a 'simple repair'. Because the book repair program in Preservation
Services is in its infancy it will take several years of data gathering
before we will be able to accurately predict the number of repairs
we can accommodate in-house each year.
Finally, in-house book repair should not be seen as a solution to
book damage. We know that a certain percentage of our collection will
wear out each year. An element of an effective book repair operation
should be an examination of the causes that generate repairs. While
some causes, such as the absence of environmental controls, may be
impossible to change, increasing staff and users' awareness of how
books should be handled will aid in decreasing the number of books
needing repairs. A responsible conservation operation should be run
in tandem with a program to increase public and staff awareness of
the need for responsible general collections book handling.