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Conservation & Preservation
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Why using lasers to clean feathers is not a bird-brained idea

Conservators have used the method on a ceremonial cape made by the Tupinambá—a cannibalistic tribe from Brazil

Emily Sharpe
8 June 2018
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A Scarlet Ibis Courtesy of Bjørn Christian Tørrissen

A Scarlet Ibis Courtesy of Bjørn Christian Tørrissen

What is the secret to cleaning centuries of dirt from a cape made from more than 5,300 feathers? Why lasers, of course. After learning that the Vatican Museums had used infrared lasers to clean some of its feathered works, conservators from Milan decided to try the method on this ceremonial cape made by the Tupinambá—a cannibalistic tribe from Brazil. The garment, made primarily from the feathers of the Scarlet Ibis, dates to the late 16th or early 17th century. It is thought to have been worn by warriors during rituals.

The idea of cleaning feathers with lasers came from The Vatican Museums

Although the piece had undergone at least two earlier interventions, it had become so fragile it could not be displayed safely. It, along with other works restored with funds from the Italian banking group Intesa Sanpaolo, went on display in March at Turin’s Reggia di Venaria Reale in the exhibition The Fragility of Beauty: Titian, Van Dyck, Twombly and 200 Other Restored Masterpieces (until 16 September).

Conservation & PreservationBrazilVatican MuseumsMilan
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