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By Dagoth
WIP - Restoration of a 1961 10/8/8 LOTR set
16 Mar, 2023
(edited)
2023-3-16 11:32:37 PM UTC
2023-3-16 11:32:37 PM UTC
Hello everyone,
I'm having a 1961 1st edition GAU set restored by a professional art archivist. I acquired it earlier this year after taking a chance on it even though it had several glaring issues. These are but not limited to:
-3 protective covers taped down to the dust jacket and end papers
-spine on fellowship is sagging slightly
-no idea what the boards underneath look like due to the dust jackets being stuck down to them
-the 6th state case was banged up quite a bit, taped on the left sides and separated at the top board.
But I saw potential, namely, (tape aside) the pristine condition of the dust jackets due to the protective covers seemingly being taped on there for god knows how long. I also suspected that the boards underneath were going to be great.
I'm documenting this here, so that others can see what one can and cannot do with a less intrusive archival restoration. The purpose of this restoration is to be as unintrusive as possible with the treatment, and to not introduce anything unnatural or new to the books themselves in order to maintain the most continuity possible with the original set. This is restoration primarily!
The first post will be the initial condition that I received the books in, and it will be updated over the next few months as work is being done on the books themselves.
I hope this is educational to anyone who may potentially be looking to do some work on their beloved books.
I'm having a 1961 1st edition GAU set restored by a professional art archivist. I acquired it earlier this year after taking a chance on it even though it had several glaring issues. These are but not limited to:
-3 protective covers taped down to the dust jacket and end papers
-spine on fellowship is sagging slightly
-no idea what the boards underneath look like due to the dust jackets being stuck down to them
-the 6th state case was banged up quite a bit, taped on the left sides and separated at the top board.
But I saw potential, namely, (tape aside) the pristine condition of the dust jackets due to the protective covers seemingly being taped on there for god knows how long. I also suspected that the boards underneath were going to be great.
I'm documenting this here, so that others can see what one can and cannot do with a less intrusive archival restoration. The purpose of this restoration is to be as unintrusive as possible with the treatment, and to not introduce anything unnatural or new to the books themselves in order to maintain the most continuity possible with the original set. This is restoration primarily!
The first post will be the initial condition that I received the books in, and it will be updated over the next few months as work is being done on the books themselves.
I hope this is educational to anyone who may potentially be looking to do some work on their beloved books.
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