What successful methods have libraries found for dealing with smoke-damaged materials?
We have a few members of our library that routinely return materials
that reek of smoke. We are looking for
- practical methods to remove the smoke smell from books and
audio-visual materials without damaging the materials. Internet
research yields lots of suggestions: kitty litter, Bounce dryer
sheets, charcoal, baking soda, a warm oven, or the ozone chamber at
the local dry cleaners. Has anyone actually tried any of these, can
they be implemented in a practical manner, and what is the risk to
the material?
- policy suggestions for dealing with members who return materials
that reek of smoke
Mary Jo Finch
Comments
- jonsca: I don't know if a company like SERVPRO would be willing to give up their
secrets, as they do a lot of large-scale smoke damage repair.
Answer by Jessie Pate
I don't have firsthand experience with this, but some remedies were
shared via my state library association's listserv a while back. Here
are their suggestions:
"Most used a closed container of some kind with these various odor
eliminators inside – with varying success. It probably depends on how
much smoke was actually absorbed by the books. Also most of the books
were placed on edge with the pages fanned out.
Sealed container with
- Soap (deodorant soap like DIAL a couple of weeks
- dryer sheets, a couple of days
- kitty litter, about a week
- bottle of vanilla extract, a few days
- Solid air freshener, a few days
- Box of baking soda and newspapers, about a week
- Coffee grounds, a few days
- Gonzo odor eliminators, a few days
- Charcoal briquettes, a few days
- Big D odor control fogger. Sprayer on a cloth and sealed up with
books. Even got rid of skunk smell. 3 days
Or:
- Put in a cupboard or closet with Oreck air cleaner Room Ionizer
- Actually spray books while fanning with ozium or fabreeze – ozium
has an odor itself that some people don’t like.
- Fans books out with fans and exposes to sunlight.
Finally, The method outlined in the following blog post seems to be a
easy and cost-effective strategy:
http://parkslibrarypreservationdpress.com/2011/06/30/stinky-books/
If you search through the various book conservation vendor catalogs you
will find specialized book deoderizer products but I like this method
because the product is cheap and readily available through Amazon."
Comments
- Joe: I've used vanilla extract w/ musty refrigerators & coolers -- it helps
to put it on a paper towel, so there's more surface area. Also for the
charcoal, you really want to try to find activated charcoal, or at the
very least, crush the charcoal to dust to increase the surface area.
- Mary Jo Finch: Thank you! The link had great photos that looked doable!