Difference between revisions of "Storage Furniture"
(added abstract text) |
EmilyBraker (Talk | contribs) |
||
(3 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown) | |||
Line 17: | Line 17: | ||
==Online Resources== | ==Online Resources== | ||
− | [[Category:Collection Storage]] [[Category: | + | [[Category:Collection Storage]][[Category:Best Practices]][[Category:Curation Practices]][[Category:Preventative Conservation Book]][[Category:Specimen and Material Type]] |
Latest revision as of 16:42, 14 December 2020
Chapter 28: Storage Furniture
Barbara P. Moore, Lacoma, NY
Jeffrey C. Weatherston, WeatherstonBruer Associates, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Russell D. White, Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History, New Haven, CT
Stephen L. Williams, Waco, TX
Storage furniture is used to organize space efficiently and facilitate access while providing suitable physical support and environmental protection for objects and specimens. Well-designed storage furniture should be thought of as a primary form of preventive conservation, the “first line of defense in ensuring the longevity of collections”. In addition, storage furniture should encourage logical organization within a collection, facilitating retrieval and promoting careful handling. Good storage also fosters a cost-effective collection care program; time is saved by reducing the need for ongoing maintenance and remedial conservation treatments. Because different materials have varying preservation requirements, it is important to select furniture that will provide protection against the agents of deterioration that present the greatest threats to a given collection in a space. This approach to storage encompasses the concepts of risk management developed by Michalski and Waller.
References