Conservation, Storage, and Technology
Conservation, Storage, and Technology
The Textiles and Clothing Museum uses new technologies to link theoretical knowledge with hands-on experiences. Visual literacy is as vital to students today as written and oral communication. Active learning through exhibitions, museum programs, and object-based activities in the classroom supports and enhances the learner’s experience, promoting creative thinking, problem-solving, and communication skills. Within the museum are these facilities:
The Donna Rae Danielson Conservation Laboratory
The Danielson Conservation lab is a 375-square-foot specialized laboratory and classroom where textiles from the collection are cared for and preservation methods are taught.
Professor Donna Rae Danielson received her B.S. (1957) and M.S. (1961) from Iowa State University and joined the Textiles and Clothing faculty in 1964. Danielson retired in 1991. Following her death in 2006, her estate provided a significant bequest toward the establishment of the new Textiles and Clothing Museum.
The conservation lab is a teaching facility focused on the conservation of the museum’s collection. We are not accepting contract work at this time.
The Bertha and Edward Waldee Storage Facility
The Waldee Storage Facility is an environmentally controlled 700-square-foot space in which current conservation standards are practiced. This storage space secures approximately 6,000 of the museum’s 9,000 artifacts in compact storage units.
Edward Waldee received his B.S. (1937) and Ph.D. (1942) in plant pathology from Iowa State College and worked abroad in international agriculture development. Bertha J. Waldee was a professor in the Textiles and Clothing program at Utah State before her marriage. The Waldees gave the collection numerous examples of textiles collected from their travels abroad.
The Waldee estate provided funding for the state-of-the-art storage facility.