This part is fairly simple. You will leave your specimen on the styrofoam board, vellum, pins and all. Place this in a protected
indoor space that is dry and dark. A heated or air-conditioned room greatly helps, do not use a humidifier in this room. I generally like to leave my
for a minimum of 2 months to be on the safe side, though it can depend on the size of the insect. For very large ones, you may choose to leave it for up
to 4 months. It's important to write the date you spread the insect somewhere. If not on a corner of the vellum, keep a notebook or a computer file with
this information.
There are 2 commonly used types of mounts for insects, riker and riker-style mounts and shadow boxes. What you choose will be up to your personal taste.
| Riker Mounts | off-brand Rikers | Shadow Boxes | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Classic look | No color choice | Lots of looks and styles | |||
| No hanger included | hanger usually attached | ||||
| secures specimen well | relies on pin for securing specimen may turn |
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| lid fits well | may have larger gaps, allowing pests easier access |
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| easy to repel pests | harder to repel pests |
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An additional note: With shadow boxes, gravity and any vibration will eventually take it's toll and the insect will probably fall apart at some point since it is only
held to the background with a pin. With Riker mounts, the specimen is held pretty tightly against the glass, so the same issues do not apply (unless your cat climbs up
and knocks it down :/ ).
For a Riker Mount or similar:
For a shadow box: Open it and pin the specimen to the back. If there is not enough backing material to securely pin to, I would suggest adding a thin
piece of foam and covering with foamboard or fabric in the color of your choice. You can also get really crafty if you want and select some acid-free scrapbooking
paper or even make a collage with it and glue it to the foamboard with an acid-free glue stick.
Next: Pests