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Old 25th August 2017, 10:49 AM   #1
Roland_M
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mariusgmioc
I also use Renaissance Wax but I can normally discern the traces of its use. And I didn't see any of those traces in most of the museums.

Marius
Hi Marius,

the problem with the traces of its use can be solved easy. All you need to do is heating the surface a little bit by gently using a hair dryer or hot air blower (60-80°C). The traces will disappear by itself. Maybe this is the secret of the museums.


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Roland
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Old 25th August 2017, 03:50 PM   #2
mariusgmioc
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Roland_M
Hi Marius,

the problem with the traces of its use can be solved easy. All you need to do is heating the surface a little bit by gently using a hair dryer or hot air blower (60-80°C). The traces will disappear by itself. Maybe this is the secret of the museums.


Regards,
Roland
Thank you Roland for your suggestion!

Will certainly try it and I am pretty sure it will work.

Regards,

Marius
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Old 25th August 2017, 04:23 PM   #3
ariel
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Roland is 100% correct.
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Old 25th August 2017, 04:52 PM   #4
Bob A
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Here's a link to the possible problems resulting from use of wax, and the difficulty of removing same, in a museum environment.

Spoiler alert: I was taken aback by the curator's having to resort to using boiling xylene to effect removal.

Before I read the article, I had used Renaissance Wax on a keris blade that would benefit from treatment to restore pamor. Now I fear that it may not be possible. Fortunately I am a successful, even talented, procrastinator, so it's likely I'd never have made the attempt anyway.

Link:

http://cool.conservation-us.org/jaic...35-01-001.html
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Old 25th August 2017, 05:19 PM   #5
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Bob A
Here's a link to the possible problems resulting from use of wax, and the difficulty of removing same, in a museum environment.

Spoiler alert: I was taken aback by the curator's having to resort to using boiling xylene to effect removal.

Before I read the article, I had used Renaissance Wax on a keris blade that would benefit from treatment to restore pamor. Now I fear that it may not be possible. Fortunately I am a successful, even talented, procrastinator, so it's likely I'd never have made the attempt anyway.

Link:

http://cool.conservation-us.org/jaic...35-01-001.html
I think it's advisable to treat only that which needs treating. If it doesn't need treating I would avoid treating it. So I would not apply Renaissance Wax on everything simply for the sake of it. But if something looks like it would rust then I would treat it. Also if something wood or leather looked in danger of drying out then I would consider treating it. Obviously if you have a temperature and humidity controlled storage space there is no need to treat the objects just for the sake of it. Any time you take action to treat some material you run the risk of damaging or ruining it. So I would as a rule leave it alone unless there is some problem.
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