Here’s our inaugural Photo Friday. It’s short, but pretty sweet. Enjoy, have a great weekend, and we’ll check back in with you next week.
[slideshow]
Here’s our inaugural Photo Friday. It’s short, but pretty sweet. Enjoy, have a great weekend, and we’ll check back in with you next week.
[slideshow]
Last week, we received the final eleven Campbell goblets that a local family donated to us after purchasing them in the 1941 Selkirk auction. [Here’s the scoop in case you missed the original post.]
Today, it’s time to check these goblets in. In museum vernacular, the formal process of bringing an item (or in this case, items) into the collection is called accessioning.
We taught intern Sam how to accession today, and we thought you would get a kick out of a behind-the-scenes peek at what we do.
Step 1: Clean the item. In this case, the sterling goblets were pretty tarnished after years of being in storage, so Executive Director Andy gave Sam a lesson on how to polish silver like a champ.
Step 3: Label the item with the accession number. Somehow. You’ve probably never thought about how you would label a piece of sterling. On the off chance you did, you probably weren’t concerned with doing it in such a way that you could remove the label if necessary. If we used a Sharpie on the bottom of the goblet, that ink would be on there for good. We don’t want to do that because a Sharpie would alter the condition of the object. We want it to be good as new. (Or at least as good as it was when we received it.) First rule in the museum world: Do no harm. So how do you write on a silver goblet without really writing on it? In this case, something called B72. It’s a clear gel-like substance that, after painting it on a solid object like glass, porcelain or silver, you can write on it. [Editorial comment: In addition to being an indispensable museum tool, it stinks to high heaven.] If you don’t want the number on the object any more, simply hit the section with a little bit of acetone and it will remove the writing and the patch of B72.
Next comes the really fun part: deciding where to feature the goblets in the house.
And that is how we accession new items into Campbell House’s collection.