Description
Conservation-Grade Solvents
Solvents are essential for cleaning, resin dissolving, and varnish removal. Conservation demands high-purity, spectroscopic-grade solvents that leave behind zero chemical residues.
- Alcohols (Ethanol & Isopropanol): Frequently used to dissolve modern inks, mobilize coatings, or act as an interim carrier for conservation dyes. They dry rapidly, making them safe for specific paper consolidation tasks.
- Aliphatic Hydrocarbons (Mineral Spirits & Shellsol): Non-polar, low-aromatic solvents highly prized for removing surface waxes, grimy oils, or greasy residues from canvases and leather without disrupting water-soluble paints or original inks beneath.
- Ketones (Acetone): A highly aggressive, fast-evaporating solvent commonly utilized to strip stubborn, aged synthetic resins, lacquer varnishes, or cross-linked acrylic adhesive stains.
- Deionized & Distilled Water: Chemically pure water stripped of all mineral salts, heavy metals, and chlorine. It serves as the baseline solvent for preparing wheat starch pastes, washing acidic papers, and hydrating historical textiles.



Reviews
There are no reviews yet.