Historic dye analysis: method development and new applications in cultural heritage

A review of the main natural dyes (particularly yellow flavonoids and red anthraquinones) and proteinaceous substrates used in Historical Tapestries and North American porcupine quill work was undertaken, and is summarised in Chapter 1. The analysis of natural dyes which have been used on museum art...

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Main Author: Troalen, Lore Gertrud
Other Authors: Hulme, Alison, Bradley, Mark, Mcnab, Hamish, Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC)
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: The University of Edinburgh 2013
Subjects:
RBS
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1842/11717
id ftunivedinburgh:oai:era.ed.ac.uk:1842/11717
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivedinburgh:oai:era.ed.ac.uk:1842/11717 2023-05-15T17:41:53+02:00 Historic dye analysis: method development and new applications in cultural heritage Troalen, Lore Gertrud Hulme, Alison Bradley, Mark Mcnab, Hamish Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) 2013-06-29 application/octet-stream application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1842/11717 en eng The University of Edinburgh http://hdl.handle.net/1842/11717 tapestries porcupine quill work dyes UPLC Ultra Performance Liquid Chromatography HPLC High Performance Liquid Chromatography mordant ICP-OES PIXE Rutherford Backscattering Spectrometry RBS Thesis or Dissertation Doctoral PhD Doctor of Philosophy 2013 ftunivedinburgh 2021-08-08T12:06:38Z A review of the main natural dyes (particularly yellow flavonoids and red anthraquinones) and proteinaceous substrates used in Historical Tapestries and North American porcupine quill work was undertaken, and is summarised in Chapter 1. The analysis of natural dyes which have been used on museum artefacts other than textiles has received little systematic study, particularly those of non-European origin. In this research, the use of Ultra Performance Liquid Chromatography (UPLC) for study of natural dyes found on historical textiles and ethnographical objects decorated with porcupine quill work is explored; this required a transfer of existing analytical protocols and methodology. The advantages of using Ultra Performance Liquid Chromatography (UPLC) was evaluated through a method development based on the separation and quantification of ten flavonoid and anthraquinone dyes as described in Chapter 2. These methods were then applied to the characterisation of the dye sources found on a group of sixteenth century historical tapestries which form an important part of the Burrell Collection in Glasgow and are believed to have been manufactured in an English workshop (Chapter 3) and also to the analysis of some late nineteenth century North American porcupine quill work from a collection owned by National Museums Scotland (Chapter 5); allowing exciting conclusions to be drawn in each case about the range of dyestuffs used in their manufacture. The second aim of this research was the development of methodology for the non-invasive quantification of metal ion residues on porcupine quill substrates. This was achieved through a comparative study of reference porcupine quills prepared in-house with dyebaths containing a range of metal ion concentrations (copper and tin). The concentration of metal ions sorbed by the porcupine quills was then quantified with Inductively Coupled Plasma (ICP) coupled to Optical Emission Spectrometry (OES) and non-invasive Particle Induced X-Ray Emission analysis (PIXE) coupled with Rutherford Backscattering Spectrometry (RBS) as described in Chapter 4. The responses provided by the different methods were compared and they were then applied to the study of micro-samples collected from mid-nineteenth century Northern Athapaskan porcupine quill work. Unexpectedly, the use of UPLC analysis and RBS-PIXE analysis allowed the characterisation of traded European natural dyes used with metallic mordants (copper and tin) on these samples, highlighting how European contact impacted on traditional Athapaskan porcupine quill work in the late nineteenth century (Chapter 5). Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Northern Athapaskan Edinburgh Research Archive (ERA - University of Edinburgh)
institution Open Polar
collection Edinburgh Research Archive (ERA - University of Edinburgh)
op_collection_id ftunivedinburgh
language English
topic tapestries
porcupine quill work
dyes
UPLC
Ultra Performance Liquid Chromatography
HPLC
High Performance Liquid Chromatography
mordant
ICP-OES
PIXE
Rutherford Backscattering Spectrometry
RBS
spellingShingle tapestries
porcupine quill work
dyes
UPLC
Ultra Performance Liquid Chromatography
HPLC
High Performance Liquid Chromatography
mordant
ICP-OES
PIXE
Rutherford Backscattering Spectrometry
RBS
Troalen, Lore Gertrud
Historic dye analysis: method development and new applications in cultural heritage
topic_facet tapestries
porcupine quill work
dyes
UPLC
Ultra Performance Liquid Chromatography
HPLC
High Performance Liquid Chromatography
mordant
ICP-OES
PIXE
Rutherford Backscattering Spectrometry
RBS
description A review of the main natural dyes (particularly yellow flavonoids and red anthraquinones) and proteinaceous substrates used in Historical Tapestries and North American porcupine quill work was undertaken, and is summarised in Chapter 1. The analysis of natural dyes which have been used on museum artefacts other than textiles has received little systematic study, particularly those of non-European origin. In this research, the use of Ultra Performance Liquid Chromatography (UPLC) for study of natural dyes found on historical textiles and ethnographical objects decorated with porcupine quill work is explored; this required a transfer of existing analytical protocols and methodology. The advantages of using Ultra Performance Liquid Chromatography (UPLC) was evaluated through a method development based on the separation and quantification of ten flavonoid and anthraquinone dyes as described in Chapter 2. These methods were then applied to the characterisation of the dye sources found on a group of sixteenth century historical tapestries which form an important part of the Burrell Collection in Glasgow and are believed to have been manufactured in an English workshop (Chapter 3) and also to the analysis of some late nineteenth century North American porcupine quill work from a collection owned by National Museums Scotland (Chapter 5); allowing exciting conclusions to be drawn in each case about the range of dyestuffs used in their manufacture. The second aim of this research was the development of methodology for the non-invasive quantification of metal ion residues on porcupine quill substrates. This was achieved through a comparative study of reference porcupine quills prepared in-house with dyebaths containing a range of metal ion concentrations (copper and tin). The concentration of metal ions sorbed by the porcupine quills was then quantified with Inductively Coupled Plasma (ICP) coupled to Optical Emission Spectrometry (OES) and non-invasive Particle Induced X-Ray Emission analysis (PIXE) coupled with Rutherford Backscattering Spectrometry (RBS) as described in Chapter 4. The responses provided by the different methods were compared and they were then applied to the study of micro-samples collected from mid-nineteenth century Northern Athapaskan porcupine quill work. Unexpectedly, the use of UPLC analysis and RBS-PIXE analysis allowed the characterisation of traded European natural dyes used with metallic mordants (copper and tin) on these samples, highlighting how European contact impacted on traditional Athapaskan porcupine quill work in the late nineteenth century (Chapter 5).
author2 Hulme, Alison
Bradley, Mark
Mcnab, Hamish
Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC)
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Troalen, Lore Gertrud
author_facet Troalen, Lore Gertrud
author_sort Troalen, Lore Gertrud
title Historic dye analysis: method development and new applications in cultural heritage
title_short Historic dye analysis: method development and new applications in cultural heritage
title_full Historic dye analysis: method development and new applications in cultural heritage
title_fullStr Historic dye analysis: method development and new applications in cultural heritage
title_full_unstemmed Historic dye analysis: method development and new applications in cultural heritage
title_sort historic dye analysis: method development and new applications in cultural heritage
publisher The University of Edinburgh
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/1842/11717
genre Northern Athapaskan
genre_facet Northern Athapaskan
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1842/11717
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