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Started by MouthCaller, April 29, 2013, 08:41:37 PM
Quote from: GobbleNut on April 30, 2013, 10:42:27 AMIf you wish to take the fan completely apart and then reassemble it, that is totally up to you,...but it is also completely unnecessary, and will take you a considerably longer amount of time to accomplish the same end result. The simplest and fastest way to preserve the fan is to simply remove as much meat and fat from the tail area as you can with a razor-blade tool of some sort (single edge razor blades in a holder work very well). Just fold the skin back around the tail to expose the meat and fat and trim it away, leaving all the tail feathers attached to the base and skin. Once you have as much of the meat/fat removed as you can get with the razor tool, rub borax thoroughly into the fan base. Then take a wire brush and brush away as much more fat as you can, and then apply more borax. If the fan has gotten dirty or bloody, you should wash it thoroughly to remove whatever is on it. Put it in a tub of cold water, add a little dishwashing soap, and gently clean off the fan feathers. Clean them thoroughly. Rinse in cold water, let drip dry, and then take a hair dryer and blow dry the feathers until they are completely dry. The fan will come out looking just like it was on a live bird by doing this.Spread the tail fan on a piece of cardboard to the shape you want it and pin it in place. Often, just a couple of pins through the outside fan feathers will hold the fan in place, but put pins wherever needed to hold the fan in the shape you want it. Use your fingers to straighten and/or close split feathers, and be sure to position the secondary fan feathers in place so you have a balanced appearance to the fan and the feathers are uniformly spaced. Let the fan dry on the cardboard for at least a couple of weeks, making sure you look at it on occasion and reposition any feathers that are moving as they dry. Once it has dried, it will hold its shape without any additional work, but if you wish to apply bondo or some other epoxy to protect the fan base, that is up to you. As for the time a fan will last, the important thing is to inspect them every few months to see if there is any evidence that you are getting any sort of bug infestation. Spraying a little Raid or other insect killer on the fan occasionally will insure that the bugs will stay away.