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Cleaning Up Your Act
Do your patrons blow dust off books as they remove them from shelves? Does
your staff sneeze a lot? At the end of the day, does your white garment resemble
the "before" segment of a detergent commercial? If yes, it's time
to clean up your act. By maintaining a clean environment, you accomplish
three things: 1) You help preserve the materials; 2) you have more pleasant
working conditions; and 3) you demonstrate to your patrons that you care
about your collections.
Vacuum cleaners with brush attachments are obvious choices, but they are
noisy and they can suck up loose spines and loose fragments of text. Wrap
and tape a piece of nylon stocking over the brush to prevent accidentally
sucking up things besides dust. If you have no machine or cannot stand the
din, then One-Wipe™ or Dust Bunny™ dust cloths may be used. In many cases,
using a vacuum followed by dust cloths is better than using only one method.
Always start on the top shelves so that any disturbed dust falls onto the
dirty books beneath. With a vacuum you can do the tops of the all volumes
on a shelf, clean the fore edges as you remove the books, then do the shelf.
If you are using only dust cloths, it is a bit more complicated. Begin at
one end of a row and remove a tome, holding it firmly around the spine with
one hand to prevent dust from falling among the leaves. Of course, once you
remove a few volumes, the others will fall over, so you need to prop them
up with a sturdy bookend or a padded brick.
After you have removed a volume, turn it so the spine is uppermost and gently
wipe the head with the cloth, moving from the spine towards the fore edge.
Then do the fore edge and finish with a wipe over the entire volume. Place
the cleaned volume on a book truck or shelf away from the action and repeat
the procedure for the remaining items on the shelf. After the shelf is empty,
dust it well and then replace the tomes.
Continue in a like manner until the top two or three shelves of an entire
stack are clean. If you go about this like a person stomping snakes, you
may only get the top shelf done before you start blowing dust on items across
the aisle, so work accordingly. Be sure to alternate stacks so that dust
from the top of one range does not fall onto clean items on the bottom of
the unit across the way. Remember to clean the floor gently every once in
a while, so you don't kick up dust with your feet.
Simple? Yes. Boring? Absolutely. Working with a partner makes the process
go more quickly, both physically and psychologically. The job does require
some care, but not the concentration of a brain surgeon, so talking with
someone or listening to the radio will help alleviate the boredom.
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Updated: 05/08/2009