Showing posts with label vintage sampler saving. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vintage sampler saving. Show all posts

Monday, April 28, 2014

Can this sampler be saved?


This family sampler of my Mom's (step mom) was framed under glass, and subjected to a humid climate in storage limbo while my parents moved and built their dream house a few years ago.  The maker, older relative was long passed and I had never met her.

When I found it in the storage building, I really thought it was beyond saving.  Mom told me to just discard it.  That made me want to try and save it, for her sake.

I decided that it was a lost cause, which made me want to try and save it.  I decided that I couldn't make it any worse...


It had spots of mildew and many yellow areas, I suspect due to exposure to lignin, a chemical in paper from wood pulp (the same stuff that turns newspaper clippings brown).  It was mounted years and years ago on a cardboard mount, long before people realized that textiles should only be exposed to acid-free paper.


It was worked on linen and trimmed WAY to close for the framing.


See the residual paper/cardboard around the edges?  It was glued to the cardboard mounting.  What a freaking mess!



I had this little sample of Vintage Textile Soak I had picked up somewhere and thought I would give it a try...


I soaked it in tepid water with the dissolved wonder product.  I soaked it overnight...afraid to soak it any longer because I didn't want to damage the dye in the old embroidery thread.

The water was disgusting before I started rinsing out the  cleaning agent.



I soaked and rinsed until the water was crystal clear...you can see below that I wasn't quite "there" yet...


I gently squeezed out as much water as possible before rolling in a clean towel and squeezing further.

Using a pencil, I traced a rectangle of the right dimensions on a piece of foam board to use as a guide, then I stretched out the damp piece and pinned generously before allowing to air dry.

It's not perfect, and I think it looks cleaner than my poor photography demonstrates.  I will remove the pins and press it well before choosing some neutral fabric that closely matches to "make" a fabric mat for it using overlapping folded strips.  I will show that part later.

There is some very slight staining in places, but I choose to call that patina.  We'll see how it looks when the whole restoration is done.


In stitches,
Teresa  :o)