184 C 2 (Photo: Byvanck archive artwork in the public domain). 1400-10, tempera and gold on vellum, 349 x 270 (265 x 179) mm, 2 columns, 32 lines, littera textualis, Latin. Missal of the Haarlem Linen Weavers Guild, North Holland (Haarlem?), ca. 149v), showing damage where the priest repeatedly kissed it. “White Gloves or Not White Gloves,” Medieval Manuscripts Blog, 19 August 2011.Fig. “Misconceptions about White Gloves,” International Preservation News No. With thanks to hand models Liz O’Brien and Kirsten van der Veen! The librarians of Smithsonian Libraries Special Collections will be right there with you. So next time you see a character in a TV show donning white gloves to page through a rare book, feel free to tut at your screen. While it is important that we strive not to damage books, it is far more important that the books do not damage you! Using white gloves to handle books with metal elements? Okay! A further important exception is made for otherwise “normal” rare books that contain toxic elements such as arsenic. Another is books with lots of metal components (clasps, bosses, and protective corner-pieces), for similar reasons. The largest is photographic material: a large body of scientific evidence indicates that any amount of oil or residue on skin can react with the sensitive chemicals used in the photographic process. This information can be used to better connect with potential users, but also indicates that perhaps writers and video-makers ought to do a bit more research before they put their librarian in gloves.īut, like most things having to do with rare books, exceptions to the glove prohibition abound. The ubiquity of the association of white gloves with rare books also indicates that many people’s first knowledge of special collections comes from popular media, rather than specialists. White glove use acts as a visual shorthand for “old and valuable object,” allowing a writer or commentator to save that narrative space for other story elements. However, a point can also be made about the representation of libraries, librarians, and rare books in the media. So how did white gloves make their way into the popular conception of special collections libraries? Baker and Silverman speculate that the idea of white-gloved librarians is only about 20 years old, and stems from canny vendors and archival supply catalogs praising their virtues. The British Library’s Medieval Manuscript Blog post on the topic cites a medieval source that describes how reading a book with gloved hands was frowned upon in that period, too admittedly, this medieval source was more concerned with decrying the “extravagance” of reading while gloved, warning that it was a path to purgatory. Baker and Silverman trace white glove use for preservation back to only the late 19 th century, when it was intended largely for photographs. Ainsworth Rand Spofford describes how Nicolas Fouquet, noted book collector of the 17 th century, insisted that his books only be handled with white gloves, but this appears to be an isolated instance. ![]() But even before modern scientific understanding of chemicals, gloves were not the librarian’s ally.įor the most part, advice on book handling through the centuries urges clean hands rather than the use of gloves. Baker and Randy Silverman could find no scientific evidence that handling paper with bare hands causes chemical damage. In their brilliant article about the dangers of glove use in reading rooms, Cathleen A. ![]() This also means that cotton gloves retain a lot of dirt, making them not so clean after all! In this same vein, gloves cause the hands to sweat, and this moisture can penetrate the gloves to wind up on the books.Their fibers can catch in cracks that are invisible to the naked eye, further damaging friable pigments and inks. Cotton gloves in particular have a tendency to lift fragments from pages, including pigments. ![]() Handling a book with gloved hands could lead to accidentally torn pages when the gloves catch on fragile edges, or a dropped book if the gloves prove to be loose or slippery. Hands in gloves lack the tactility and manual dexterity of bare hands.Smithsonian Libraries Special Collections stipulates that staff and readers have clean, dry hands when handling books. It would make sense that these historical objects should be handled with white gloves to keep them clean, right? Using white gloves to page through a rare book? Tsk tsk. Rare books, unlike many museum objects, are still used today in the same way that they would have been when they were new centuries ago – they’re held and opened, and their pages are turned. There is a unique joy in watching a video or reading a news story with images of a librarian handling a rare book.
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