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Re: [padg] Book jacket systems



Hello, Victoria,

We keep dust jackets on books for our circulating collections.  However, we
are not using a "dust jacket system" -- such as the CoLibri system now
available through Archival Products.
<http://www.archival.com/productcatalog/colibri.shtml>

At Carleton, we have been keeping dust jackets on most new books since 2001
-- close to 8000 volumes the last time I checked.  About 40% of our
incoming books have dust jackets.

The dust jackets are enclosed in a Mylar cover with acid-free paper
backing.  Student employees do all of our book processing for general
collections materials.  It takes an experienced student about one minute to
apply the dust jacket cover.  We did purchase a 14" Kutrimmer to make it
easier to neatly trim the Mylar cover to fit the jacket.  Our unit costs to
process a book with a dust jacket (all materials & labor) are $1.10.  This
is 60% more than the cost to process a book without a dust jacket.  We have
decided that the additional cost is warranted, due to the benefits we
believe the jackets provide.

We are seeing more and more books where the dust jacket is an integral
part of the cover design.  In some situations, the cover does not "read"
without the dust jacket.    Our student employees have found creative ways
to apply the Mylar covers on dust jackets with a wide variety of
presentation -- cut-outs, half-covers, translucents, etc.  We are also
finding that more paperbacks are coming with dust jackets, which we also
cover for the same reasons.

Our experience is that the Mylar dust jacket covers wear well.  Only
occasionally do we need to replace a dust jacket cover due to damage.  We
also tape the cover to the book in such a way that the tape does not
contact the cover of the book, but only the dust jacket cover itself.
Until recently, we were putting duplicate spine labels and barcodes on both
the book and jacket.  However, it is rare for a book to lose its jacket and
we have now stopped the double labeling.

I have attached our policy/procedure document -- which provides background
and rationale.  Please let me know if you have other questions.  There was
also some recent discussion of the dust jacket question on collib-l@xxxxxxx
list in May 2007.

~Carol
=========================================
Carol E. Eyler                                 ceyler@xxxxxxxxxxxx
Head of Technical Services
Carleton College Library                507-646-4268 voice
One North College St.                    507 646-4087 fax
Northfield, MN 55057
=========================================


--On Monday, June 11, 2007 3:23 PM -0500 vheidus@xxxxxxxxx wrote:


All,

Does anyone retain dust jackets on their books in their circulating
collections?  If so, do you use any product or system to cover the dust
jackets?  I'd love to hear about experiences, good/bad products, how much
time it takes, do you label both the dust jacket and the book with the
call number, etc etc.

Thanks so much!

Victoria
Victoria Heiduschke
Preservation Librarian
Illinois State University
Milner Library
vheidus@xxxxxxxxx
309-438-7463



Attachment: Dust Jacket Policy.doc
Description: MS-Word document


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