What a difference this has made.It’s really brightened up the colours of the paints ,allowing it to be viewed and enjoyed for another hundred years or mor.Beautiful job 🥰
Love these painting restoration videos you're putting out! Hope to see more of these! I'll never get tired of watching them! My favorite one is the "Moldy Watercolor Painting Restoration - Flood Damaged"
Did I miss the part where the painting was restored? All I saw was vacuuming the mold, then some paint dabbing around the edge. Then we get "the final results are stunning"..... Uh, outside of vacuuming the mold, what did the restorer do? To the casual observer it looks like nothing.
Few questions… When placing in glass, did you check before stapling to make sure there were no contaminates under the glass? Why would you use tape with moisture when moisture is the reason you get mold? Why not acid free double-stick tape?
This painting will mold again at some point. Vacuum the mold from its surface is not enough to eliminate all mold spores. What destroys them completely is either heat ( if that is possible) or UV light. Either direct sun light or one of these UV lamps. 5 minutes under direct sunlight or 5 minutes under a UV lamp would have sterilized completely the surface of the painting without affecting the watercolours. And then you could proceed safely to the retouching.
@@lrla8657 That is supposed to dry but if you haven't remove completely the mold and the mold spores from the surface of the painting, the painting will mold again. It has nothing to do with the materials that are used on the back of the painting because the mold grows with the environmental humidity. The archival support on the back will only delay a bit the regrowth of the mold that can't be eliminated by simply brushing the surface. Unless she did some other kind of cleaning as well that it is not shown on the video. But from what is shown on the video I wouldn't say that it followed the best method to remove the mold from this artwork.
UV light will destroy the pigments in the paint and turn the ivory yellow and brittle. As long as the painting is kept in a climate controlled room without excessive humidity it should be alright.
@@nrml76 Not in just five minutes. The blue UV lights are not after all that bright. And in any case it is better to be safe than sorry because you never know what will be the conditions that this item will be stored. That is the problem after all for both artists and restorers. That they can never know how their customers will handle the artworks even if they have the best of intentions. So it is better to eliminate the/any risk factors.
Wow, rhinos must use a ridiculous amount of product. Elephant ivory is the one most people think of, but there are many other similar materials. Walrus tusks are another.
They added aluminum foil in order to prevent any kind of humidity to pass from to the back cardboard to the card paper that they mounted the painting. That is not a bad idea but I'm of the opinion that this painting will mold again. And that because just vacuum the surface is not enough to eliminate the mold spores. What kills them is UV light. This painting needed 5 minutes under a UV lamp on both sides to kill whatever mold spores were left behind then careful cleaning to remove any stains and then retouching and framing into a vacuum frame case. I mean shielded into a air tight frame. It can be done but it is more expensive and time consuming.
Too bad an amateur had a go at putting it in a dollar store frame the last time around. I wish the camera angles would show as much detail in the painting process, as it does in removing tacks, loading and rinsing the brush, and marking the mounting paper.
And to think revisionists would say that painting should be destroyed because of the nasty ivory trade, but i thimk that would be disrespectful to the elephant memory. You cant bring back that elephant but you can stop it happening again, although perhaps a source of naturally expired elephant ivory could be established ,if only human greed wouldn't corrupt it.
If mat cutting and gluing are your things, this video is for you. This is more a reframing than a restoration of 'painting". Looong and boring video. The painting is generic, and kitsch. It could very well be on Buffalo or other cattle horn strips glued together. Most deceptive part of the video was the painting was deliberately kept out of focus in the beginning, the restoration was clearly 'digital' which was surreptitiously added at the very end. More of an annoying video ... NOT ASMR.
Loved the work, till he was stupid enough to use framer's tape. Dear god when will people learn how bad an idea it is and how totally unnecessary. All it does is make it harder, messier and more of an issue with future conservation and re-framing. What for? So it looks tidy if you look at the back? That should not be a priority. Doing it properly should look just fine on it's own and this did. Amateur moment from a pro, but I guess that happens sometimes when tradition overrides pragmatism.
@spacykacy31293 im glad someone agreed with me on this one 😂. These videos are perfect for me and I'll start nodding off, then I'll get rudely awoken by some annoying voice 😂
What a difference this has made.It’s really brightened up the colours of the paints ,allowing it to be viewed and enjoyed for another hundred years or mor.Beautiful job 🥰
Another great restoration I love this style. These videos are so calming. Am I the only one who could go to sleep now?
Emily is a master at her craft.
Love these painting restoration videos you're putting out! Hope to see more of these! I'll never get tired of watching them!
My favorite one is the "Moldy Watercolor Painting Restoration - Flood Damaged"
A version of this without the dialogue would be amazing! This video is relaxing and asmr in its purest form.
Wow, lucky to find this Chanel . Iam art conservator from India🙏.
you should check out baumgartner too, his results can be nicer but his productivity can be low.
Did I miss the part where the painting was restored? All I saw was vacuuming the mold, then some paint dabbing around the edge. Then we get "the final results are stunning"..... Uh, outside of vacuuming the mold, what did the restorer do? To the casual observer it looks like nothing.
✨Washi kozo✨
When I saw him putting on the glue, I just shouted “YES, A DOT IS NOT A LOT!!!”
Few questions…
When placing in glass, did you check before stapling to make sure there were no contaminates under the glass?
Why would you use tape with moisture when moisture is the reason you get mold? Why not acid free double-stick tape?
I would personally prefer to not have the narration. It disturbed the peaceful nature of the video.
This painting will mold again at some point. Vacuum the mold from its surface is not enough to eliminate all mold spores. What destroys them completely is either heat ( if that is possible) or UV light. Either direct sun light or one of these UV lamps. 5 minutes under direct sunlight or 5 minutes under a UV lamp would have sterilized completely the surface of the painting without affecting the watercolours. And then you could proceed safely to the retouching.
And why would you add tape with moisture to the back of it?
@@lrla8657 That is supposed to dry but if you haven't remove completely the mold and the mold spores from the surface of the painting, the painting will mold again. It has nothing to do with the materials that are used on the back of the painting because the mold grows with the environmental humidity. The archival support on the back will only delay a bit the regrowth of the mold that can't be eliminated by simply brushing the surface.
Unless she did some other kind of cleaning as well that it is not shown on the video.
But from what is shown on the video I wouldn't say that it followed the best method to remove the mold from this artwork.
UV light will destroy the pigments in the paint and turn the ivory yellow and brittle. As long as the painting is kept in a climate controlled room without excessive humidity it should be alright.
@@nrml76 Not in just five minutes. The blue UV lights are not after all that bright.
And in any case it is better to be safe than sorry because you never know what will be the conditions that this item will be stored. That is the problem after all for both artists and restorers. That they can never know how their customers will handle the artworks even if they have the best of intentions. So it is better to eliminate the/any risk factors.
It took 100 years to become this mouldy. Now it will take 200 years.
Last time I checked rhino didn’t produce ivory, their horns are similar to hair
It is from an elephant
I thot that, too
@@bevgordon7619i slut that too
@@kristienw9979it sure is. xXx
Wow, rhinos must use a ridiculous amount of product.
Elephant ivory is the one most people think of, but there are many other similar materials. Walrus tusks are another.
Awesome!
thx so much for your skills to use the presrve our culture.
They added gaps for ait flow, then put aluminum foil for a impenetrable barrier?
They added aluminum foil in order to prevent any kind of humidity to pass from to the back cardboard to the card paper that they mounted the painting.
That is not a bad idea but I'm of the opinion that this painting will mold again. And that because just vacuum the surface is not enough to eliminate the mold spores. What kills them is UV light. This painting needed 5 minutes under a UV lamp on both sides to kill whatever mold spores were left behind then careful cleaning to remove any stains and then retouching and framing into a vacuum frame case. I mean shielded into a air tight frame.
It can be done but it is more expensive and time consuming.
Too bad an amateur had a go at putting it in a dollar store frame the last time around.
I wish the camera angles would show as much detail in the painting process, as it does in removing tacks, loading and rinsing the brush, and marking the mounting paper.
Great making video anyway 👍👍
And to think revisionists would say that painting should be destroyed because of the nasty ivory trade, but i thimk that would be disrespectful to the elephant memory. You cant bring back that elephant but you can stop it happening again, although perhaps a source of naturally expired elephant ivory could be established ,if only human greed wouldn't corrupt it.
Eh? If it's a historical piece, sure keep it. Otherwise keeping a more modern one would only perpetuate the ivory trade and poaching.
0:31 Did he say “watch US restore this..” What was your contribution? 😂 Emily was asking.
If mat cutting and gluing are your things, this video is for you. This is more a reframing than a restoration of 'painting". Looong and boring video. The painting is generic, and kitsch. It could very well be on Buffalo or other cattle horn strips glued together.
Most deceptive part of the video was the painting was deliberately kept out of focus in the beginning, the restoration was clearly 'digital' which was surreptitiously added at the very end.
More of an annoying video ... NOT ASMR.
Loved the work, till he was stupid enough to use framer's tape. Dear god when will people learn how bad an idea it is and how totally unnecessary. All it does is make it harder, messier and more of an issue with future conservation and re-framing. What for? So it looks tidy if you look at the back? That should not be a priority. Doing it properly should look just fine on it's own and this did. Amateur moment from a pro, but I guess that happens sometimes when tradition overrides pragmatism.
That putty looked like blue tack.
The thumbnail was a total lie 😠
What kind of glue do they use to glue the card stock.
nice video 👍
AI narrator. Doesn't know about Rinos..
Would be interesting to actually have a camera angle from above rather than a side view, just seemed a bit pointless
Why do all that conservation work just to then use acid filled cardboard at the end?
C'est plus un travail d'encadrement qu'un travail de restauration.
Jay Shree Krishna🕉️
Rhino horn is not harvested for Ivory, it is made of carotene, like coagulated hair, not ivory. THese trades, supported by poachers is disgusting.
It’s made of keratin: carotene is an orange plant pigment (as in carrot)
Thanks Gerry, I was just following the lead of spellchecker.@@gerryholden
Hmmmm! Not sure l agree. During the restoration l feel the painting has lost something! I wonder if any one else agrees with me.
What happened to the border? It looked like it had a pattern and then was covered up.
F A K E Restoration.
This isnt asmr 😂
👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋👋💯👍
Youre retouching but we coudlnt see anything with that angle lol
At what point?
6:30 @@tthomas9160
Why are they touching both the painting and papers with bare hands?
Because it's harder to clean it with your nose.
Why not wear gloves so skin oil isn’t a factor
Now.... for true asmr, remove the narrator's annoying voice.
Yessssss!😂
@spacykacy31293 im glad someone agreed with me on this one 😂. These videos are perfect for me and I'll start nodding off, then I'll get rudely awoken by some annoying voice 😂
Queria um vídeo sem a voz