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On Sunday I was cleaning, and I noticed that some of my compacts and the scissors to my dresser set were corroding in a glass refrigerator dish I keep on my nightstand. I assumed at the time that it was a moisture problem, cleaned it up, and blamed my stupidity for putting something away wet (I am normally more careful). During a conversation with my mother, she said that she had a dresser set that “turned to dust.” I went and examined my set, and it turns out that some of the smaller pieces had started to decay. You can see the damage below.
Six months ago I noticed what I thought was a crack on the mirror handle (due to something hitting it possibly)- and now the handle is completely broken- and this piece was not in an enclosed space or touching the other pieces that decayed. As celluloid decays, it gives off fumes and turns to nitric acid, these fumes lead other celluloid pieces to decay. I put these damaged pieces together in a bag when I found the damage just on Monday, and now most of the file handle is gone (it was intact but starting to crystalize on Monday). That is how fast this happens
I did some research on this, and found this website: http://www.oregonknifeclub.org/celluloid_02.html. This is what I learned from this website:
-Pieces that are light in color fall prey to this more often
-Once a piece goes nothing can stop it (the first signs are hairline cracks, which look like damage; pieces with metal may show small amounts of rust)
-A deteriorating piece will smell like camphor
-Having a deteriorated piece leads to further decay of other pieces; damaged pieces should be removed from your collection; remaining pieces should be cleaned thoroughly (fumes) and inspected often
-Keeping these pieces in a tightly enclosed space can lead to decay
-Pieces should be stored in a dark, controlled temperature and humidity space, separate from other pieces
-Do not store pieces in fabric, non-acidic tissue paper is best
If you think you have any items made from celluloid in your collections, please examine them. I don’t want anyone else to have the kind of heartbreak I felt when I found my things. I didn’t know this could happen- maybe it is common knowledge- but for people like me who only have one or two pieces, I hadn’t read up on celluloid. The only thing I knew about celluloid is that it was flammable and they used to make film out it it. I didn't even know this set was celluloid, it was a gift, so all I knew was it was pretty.
I’m not sure what to do with the rest of the undamaged set- half of it wants to pack it away to protect it, but I enjoyed seeing it out on my dresser.
Six months ago I noticed what I thought was a crack on the mirror handle (due to something hitting it possibly)- and now the handle is completely broken- and this piece was not in an enclosed space or touching the other pieces that decayed. As celluloid decays, it gives off fumes and turns to nitric acid, these fumes lead other celluloid pieces to decay. I put these damaged pieces together in a bag when I found the damage just on Monday, and now most of the file handle is gone (it was intact but starting to crystalize on Monday). That is how fast this happens
I did some research on this, and found this website: http://www.oregonknifeclub.org/celluloid_02.html. This is what I learned from this website:
-Pieces that are light in color fall prey to this more often
-Once a piece goes nothing can stop it (the first signs are hairline cracks, which look like damage; pieces with metal may show small amounts of rust)
-A deteriorating piece will smell like camphor
-Having a deteriorated piece leads to further decay of other pieces; damaged pieces should be removed from your collection; remaining pieces should be cleaned thoroughly (fumes) and inspected often
-Keeping these pieces in a tightly enclosed space can lead to decay
-Pieces should be stored in a dark, controlled temperature and humidity space, separate from other pieces
-Do not store pieces in fabric, non-acidic tissue paper is best
If you think you have any items made from celluloid in your collections, please examine them. I don’t want anyone else to have the kind of heartbreak I felt when I found my things. I didn’t know this could happen- maybe it is common knowledge- but for people like me who only have one or two pieces, I hadn’t read up on celluloid. The only thing I knew about celluloid is that it was flammable and they used to make film out it it. I didn't even know this set was celluloid, it was a gift, so all I knew was it was pretty.
I’m not sure what to do with the rest of the undamaged set- half of it wants to pack it away to protect it, but I enjoyed seeing it out on my dresser.